Rabia's practice of self-examination that exposes the ego's unspoken favorites, showing how we reveal our true values through whom we privilege.
Rabia taught rigorous inner witnessing—the practice of observing one's own heart without judgment to recognize attachments masquerading as principle. Favoritism thrives in the shadow of denied preference; we rarely admit we favor someone. This concept names the practice of becoming radically honest about whom we actually prefer and why. Do we favor the wealthy? The articulate? The familiar? The attractive? Rabia's tradition suggests that favoritism crystallizes around the ego's unmet needs: approval, recognition, control, comfort. By turning the mirror inward, we stop blaming others for our bias and instead witness the tender places where we've learned to seek safety through preference. This self-knowledge is costly—it requires admitting our smallness—but it's also liberating. Only what we consciously recognize can be transformed. The practice asks: what does my favoritism reveal about what I actually love?
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