The process of releasing personal investment in status and advantage as a path toward choosing fairness over self-interest.
Favoritism is ultimately an ego-driven phenomenon: we favor those who reflect us, serve us, or validate us. Rabia's radical practice involved the progressive dissolution of ego—the systematic release of attachment to prestige, advantage, and control. This concept applies her insight directly to favoritism by identifying it as an ego-protection strategy. When we favor certain people, we are protecting our investments: in our identity, our status, our narrative about who we are. The ego fears the stranger, the challenger, the one who might threaten our position. By deliberately dissolving these investments—examining where we need to win, to be right, to protect our image—we remove the emotional fuel that drives favoritism. This is not about becoming a doormat, but about developing the spiritual flexibility to make decisions based on principle rather than ego-protection. The practice involves: noticing when favoritism serves our ego; recognizing the fear beneath it; and choosing fairness even when it costs us advantage. As ego-investment diminishes, our capacity for equal regard naturally expands.
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