How favoritism operates through visibility—some relationships are publicly celebrated while others are actively hidden or rendered invisible.
Favoritism gains power through public recognition. The favored are seen, praised, and celebrated; the excluded are overlooked or actively hidden. This creates a peculiar cruelty: love that exists without witness, care that cannot be named. Rabia's radical practice was to love openly, without shame or hierarchy, moving through communities offering her whole self to all she encountered. In modern systems, favoritism often hides behind meritocratic language—claiming preference flows from objective worth—while the excluded internalize invisibility as personal failure. A manager's open investment in one employee's career while remaining distant to others sends a message about whose potential matters. A parent's delight in one child's achievements while overlooking another's creates parallel worlds of meaning. The cost to the excluded is not merely disadvantage but erasure of existence. They come to believe their own worth is genuinely lesser. Examining favoritism requires asking uncomfortable questions: Whose relationships do you celebrate publicly? Whose do you keep private? Who receives your time, attention, and hope as public investment versus private charity? Rabia would ask us to make our love visible, equally, for all.
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