How favoritism patterns pass through families and institutions across generations, creating lasting wounds that define belonging and worth for descendants.
Favoritism creates what might be called legacy wounds—patterns of preferred and excluded family members that become organizational memory, shaping how subsequent generations understand their own value and place. Rabia al-Adawiyya came from a lineage deeply marked by poverty and hardship, yet she transcended victim narratives by refusing to internalize the hierarchies imposed on her. Her wisdom teaches that while we cannot erase past favoritism, we can interrupt its transmission to future generations. When parents favor certain children, those children carry entitlement while their siblings carry rejection; both are burdened by the template established. Communities perpetuate this by maintaining hierarchies of favor based on family connections, status, or tradition. The cost compounds across time: great-grandchildren still feel the sting of a great-grandparent's preference. Rabia's teaching on community suggests that healing favoritism requires conscious, deliberate acts of equal love and attention. By recognizing how our own patterns of favoritism echo ancestral choices, we gain the power to choose differently. Building authentic community means acknowledging these wounds openly and committing to practices that distribute care and recognition across all members, not just the favored few.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.