Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Suffering as Spiritual Teaching Without Cruelty

Natural consequences and age-appropriate challenges that deepen character without inflicting unnecessary pain or humiliation.

Rabia
Why It Matters

Rabia al-Adawiyya embraced hardship as a path to spiritual maturation and closeness to the Divine. She refused to flee difficulty or seek comfort as ultimate goals. In parenting, this principle warns against both extremes: authoritarian harshness that wounds, and permissive avoidance of any difficulty. Authoritative parenting allows children to experience age-appropriate consequences and challenges—disappointment, effort, failure—while protecting them from cruelty or shame. This is not punishment; it's the natural teaching embedded in reality. A child who fails a test experiences the consequence (poor grade, need to study harder), and the parent provides support without rescuing. A child who breaks a toy learns impermanence and care. Rabia's tradition suggests that suffering itself—not inflicted pain but the discomfort of growth—teaches wisdom. Parents practicing this approach avoid unnecessary harshness while resisting the urge to cushion every difficulty. They trust that challenge, held within safety and love, builds the resilience and character their child needs.

Helpful guides
Rabia
Parenting & Community
Peri
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