Saying 'no' and enforcing boundaries with gentleness and explanation, teaching children that limits are compatible with love and respect.
Rabia taught intimacy with divine will partly through acceptance of what could not be changed. Tender refusal is the art of saying no to a child without harshness, conveying that the boundary and the child are both held in care. In early childhood (3-6), children experience constant refusals—can't eat dessert now, can't stay up late, can't have the toy another child is using. How these refusals are delivered shapes whether the child learns to trust limits or resent them. Tender refusal means: eye contact, calm tone, clear reason at the child's level ("Your body needs sleep so you feel happy tomorrow"), and often, a offered alternative ("Not that toy now, but you can have this one"). This practice honors the child's desire—"I see you really want that"—while holding the boundary. In language and play boundaries, tender refusal teaches negotiation, emotional regulation, and that disagreement need not rupture belonging. Rabia's devotion included accepting divine refusal of her personal desires; applied here, it means helping children metabolize disappointment as part of love, not proof of rejection. Over time, children internalize that some things are not available, and that's okay. They learn language to express desire and disappointment without aggression.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.