Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Vulnerability as Spiritual Authority in Parenting

The practice of parenting with authentic humility and emotional honesty, modeling for children that strength includes the willingness to be seen in struggle.

Rabia
Why It Matters

Rabia's spiritual teaching emphasized radical honesty before the Divine—no pretense, no spiritual performance, just truth. She wept, she questioned, she remained vulnerable in her devotion. This stands against a parenting mythology where authority requires invulnerability. Many fathers have learned that showing struggle or sadness undermines paternal authority. Many mothers have learned that admitting limitation means they're failing. Rabia suggests otherwise: true authority flows from integrity. A parent who can say "I made a mistake" or "I'm struggling with this too" models something children desperately need—that being human includes both strength and vulnerability. This is especially powerful across gender lines. Fathers who access emotional vulnerability teach sons that manhood isn't about emotional control. Mothers who admit the limits of their knowledge teach daughters that femininity includes healthy boundaries and self-honesty. Rabia's legacy invites parents to risk being truly seen by their children, not as perfect role-models but as human beings engaged in the sacred work of showing up with all we are.

Helpful guides
Rabia
Parenting & Community
Peri
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