Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Wound as Sacred Text

Reading your family's trauma as containing wisdom about resilience, not just instruction on what to repeat or avoid.

Rabia
Why It Matters

Rabia approached spiritual texts with reverent attention, finding layers of meaning and personal instruction. This concept applies that hermeneutic to ancestral wounds: your family's pain contains encoded knowledge. The parent who abandoned you learned abandonment. The ancestor who silenced themselves carried unprocessed grief. These are not moral failures to judge but sacred texts requiring careful interpretation. What survival strategies did your ancestors develop? What truths were they protecting you from through their silence? Understanding trauma as adaptation—rather than simply pathology—shifts your relationship to inheritance. You can honor your grandmother's toughness as the strength that kept her alive while releasing the coldness it created. This requires moving beyond victim-perpetrator binaries into systemic understanding. Rabia's radical devotion included radical honesty about suffering. Breaking generational trauma means reading your wounds carefully enough to extract the wisdom they contain, then consciously deciding what to carry forward and what to ceremonially release.

Helpful guides
Rabia
Parenting & Community
Peri
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