Understanding that parental control paradoxically damages connection, while appropriate surrender and trust in the teen's own wisdom strengthens the bond.
Rabia taught that true intimacy with the divine required radical surrender—releasing the ego's agenda and trusting completely. This principle inverts typical parent-teen dynamics driven by control: monitoring social media, dictating friends, micromanaging choices. While safety boundaries are necessary, excessive control signals profound distrust. Adolescents experience this as rejection of their emerging self. The paradox: parents who can surrender the illusion of controlling their teen's outcome often maintain deeper connection. This does not mean permissiveness; it means distinguishing between non-negotiable safety (no drugs, honest communication about whereabouts) and the teen's own choices (friend groups, artistic interests, minor style choices). When a parent says, "I trust you to make good decisions, and I'm here if you need me," rather than "I will prevent you from making mistakes," the teen's defensive walls lower. They feel trusted, which builds internalized responsibility. This mirrors Rabia's surrender: she released anxious striving and found peace. Parents who can similarly surrender control-based parenting often experience surprising loyalty from their teens. The relationship transforms from parent-as-authority to parent-as-trusted-ally.
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