The paradoxical practice of parental authority that includes surrendering control, trusting children's individuation, and allowing their unique path.
Rabia's devotion emphasized complete surrender to divine will while paradoxically advocating fierce spiritual autonomy and personal responsibility. This paradox illuminates authoritative parenting's central tension: holding authority while releasing control. Authoritarian parents typically maintain tight control, believing children need dominance to stay on track. Authoritative parents hold clear values and boundaries while progressively surrendering control to children's emerging autonomy. This requires profound trust—trust that your values have taken root, trust that your child has capacity for wise choice, trust that mistakes are part of learning. Rabia never coerced disciples; she demonstrated devotion and allowed others to choose their path. Parents practicing 'surrender and trust' gradually transfer decision-making power: What clothes will you choose? How will you solve this conflict? What are your goals? They express confidence in their child's capacity while remaining available for guidance. This paradoxical stance—strong and flexible, clear and trusting—develops children's genuine autonomy rather than either dependence or rebellion. The child internalizes parental values precisely through space to choose them, not through enforcement. Trust doesn't mean passivity; it means active presence combined with progressive relinquishment of control.
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