The internal ranking mechanism that categorizes people by usefulness, attractiveness, or alignment with our desires, which favoritism reinforces and Rabia's surrender practice dissolves.
Favoritism originates in the ego's compulsive need to measure, compare, and rank. We unconsciously assign value to people based on what they can do for us, how they make us feel, or how they reflect our identity. Rabia's spiritual tradition centered on *fana*—the dissolution of the self and its persistent measuring consciousness. She demonstrated that when we release the ego's scorecard, we no longer need favorites because we no longer need to elevate certain people to secure our worth. The cost of favoritism becomes clear when we recognize that every preference we show is a reinforcement of the ego's false hierarchy. A manager who favors compliant employees undermines team integrity while limiting their own spiritual growth. A parent who has a favorite child doesn't just harm the others; they trap their preferred child in a fragile pedestal of conditional love. Rabia's path asks: Can you see each person without the filter of utility or attraction? What would it cost to try?
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