Understanding how favoritism shapes identity and opportunity across generations, creating patterns of belonging and exclusion that persist.
Rabia's legacy centers on belonging and community, yet favoritism fractures these across time. When a child is chronically favored over siblings, the unchosen child may carry a lifelong question: am I worthy? When certain groups are structurally favored in hiring, education, or inheritance, advantage compounds while disadvantage deepens. This concept asks us to trace the long tail of favoritism: how do current preferences shape future possibilities? What identities form around being chosen or unchosen? What opportunities close? In families, we might discover that a parent's favoritism toward one sibling shaped that person's overconfidence and the other's self-doubt across decades. In institutions, we see how initial preference-based access becomes entrenched advantage. Rabia's commitment to legacy means considering what we're actually building for the future. Do our current preferences create a community where all can flourish? Or do they plant seeds of resentment and disconnection? By examining the long trajectory of favoritism, we wake to its power and our responsibility to interrupt cycles before they solidify into permanent difference.
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