A contemplative stance where parents observe adult children's choices and paths with full presence while consciously releasing the urge to guide or correct.
Rabia's devotional practice emphasized witnessing divine reality as-is, without judgment or the need to reshape it according to personal preference. Applied to adult relationships, this becomes the practice of witnessing your child's life—their career, relationships, spiritual choices, parenting style—with genuine attention and acceptance rather than intervention. This is psychologically distinct from passive disengagement; it requires active, conscious restraint of the corrective impulse that sustained you during their childhood. The parent who practices witnessing acknowledges thoughts like 'they're making a mistake' or 'I could help them do this better,' then deliberately chooses presence over instruction. This honors adult children's autonomy and the fundamental shift required when parental authority ends. Rabia's example of surrendering to divine will models this surrender to the reality of adult children's independent lives, deepening both intimacy and respect in the relationship.
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