Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Jealousy and Division as Fruits of Favoritism

The exploration of how favoritism inevitably produces envy, resentment, and fracture in systems designed to be unified.

Rabia
Why It Matters

Where there is favoritism, jealousy grows like a weed in a garden. Rabia understood this dynamic intimately in her world—families split by inheritance favoritism, students bitter about teachers' obvious preferences, disciples competing for a master's attention. Jealousy is not a moral failing but a natural response to perceived injustice. When one child receives more warmth, resources, or belief, siblings naturally feel the sting of inequity. The person favored may also experience jealousy of others' independence and authenticity, always performing to maintain status. In communities, favoritism creates visible and invisible divisions—formal hierarchies that fragment unity. The cost compounds: time and energy spent managing resentment could fuel collective work. Relationships become transactional. Rabia's wisdom suggests preventing this by design: establishing transparent principles for allocation, rotating positions of influence, and regularly examining our biases. When division does arise, honest acknowledgment and repair matter more than denial. This practice requires courage but restores the beloved community.

Helpful guides
Rabia
Parenting & Community
Peri
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