Acknowledging the fundamental separateness of parent and teenager as necessary and sacred, reducing fusion and enabling authentic encounter.
Rabia taught that even in love's intensity, the soul remains distinct—there is a veil between the lover and the beloved, even in ecstasy. Parents often unconsciously merge with their adolescents, treating the teen's choices, emotions, and identity as extensions of parental self. This causes conflict when the teenager naturally differentiates. This concept honors the veil: parent and teen are two separate beings with distinct interiors, mysteries, and destinies. The parent's task is not to know or control the teenager, but to respect the sacred distance. Paradoxically, this recognition deepens real contact. When a parent stops trying to penetrate the adolescent's privacy—emotional, psychological, or literal—and accepts not-knowing, genuine dialogue becomes possible. The teenager can risk vulnerability not as fusion but as authentic self-disclosure. The relationship moves from enmeshment to loving respect for otherness.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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