Approaching discipline as shared struggle and growth rather than punishment, with parents acknowledging their own imperfection and stakes in the relationship.
Rabia's path involved profound struggle, loneliness, and a willingness to sit with difficulty rather than escape it. She didn't punish herself for piety; she suffered alongside others in solidarity. This reframes how authoritative parents approach discipline. Authoritarian discipline often involves punitive measures designed to make children suffer the consequences of wrong choices—the parent as enforcer, separate and superior. Authoritative discipline, shaped by Rabia's solidarity, involves parents and children suffering the consequences together. When a child makes a mistake, the parent doesn't retreat into righteous judgment; they grieve the rupture with the child, work through the repair, and acknowledge their own imperfection in the relationship. This might sound like: 'When you lied to me, I felt hurt. And I recognize that sometimes I've been harsh, which made it harder for you to be honest. Let's figure out how we both do better.' This approach teaches accountability within relationship, not shame and isolation. Children learn that mistakes don't sever belonging; they're invitations for deeper understanding. Parents model that growth happens through humble struggle, not from a position of flawless authority.
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