A contemplative stance where parents observe their teen's unfolding identity with reverence, resisting the urge to control, fix, or claim authorship of their growth.
In Sufi practice, Rabia cultivated a quality of witnessing—seeing the divine in all things without grasping. Applied to parenting, witness consciousness means staying present to your adolescent's becoming without needing to direct it. The parent becomes a steady observer, not a choreographer. This is extraordinarily difficult when a teen makes choices the parent fears or judges. Witness consciousness asks: Can I see my child's mistakes as part of their own sacred unfolding, rather than reflections of my parenting failure? Can I remain present without narrating, solving, or claiming credit? In adolescence, when teens are constructing identity, excessive parental witnessing—being truly seen without judgment—paradoxically grants them freedom to be authentic. The parent who practices this becomes a safe mirror rather than a mirror with commentary. This creates the psychological conditions for genuine belonging: the teen feels known and accepted in their realness, not in their performance.
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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