Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Accountability Without Shame

A framework for addressing favoritism in communities where mistakes can be acknowledged and corrected without destroying relationships.

Rabia
Why It Matters

One reason favoritism persists is that acknowledging it feels shameful—admitting you've been unfair, that you've shown preference, seems to reveal moral failure. Many communities avoid the conversation altogether, allowing resentment to fester instead. Rabia's tradition, rooted in radical compassion, offers an alternative: accountability that separates the person from the pattern. You can acknowledge that you favor someone without believing you are a bad person; you can commit to changing the pattern without performing self-flagellation. This creates safety for the difficult conversations that prevent favoritism from calcifying. A leader can say: 'I've realized I've been giving more attention to people similar to me, and I'm implementing measures to change that.' Team members can offer feedback without fear of retaliation: 'I've noticed some voices are heard more than others, and here's what I suggest.' The cost of shame-based accountability is silence and hidden resentment. The cost of no accountability is continued injustice. Rabia's model suggests a middle way: honest, direct, rooted in commitment to change rather than self-recrimination. This creates the conditions for communities to actually shift patterns rather than just talk about them.

Helpful guides
Rabia
Parenting & Community
Peri
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Explored In These Journeys
Journey
The Examined Path Through Favoritism — when it happens and what it costs
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