A contemplative tool where you examine whom you favor and discover what disowned aspects of yourself you're seeking to reclaim through them.
Often, we show strongest favoritism toward people who represent qualities we've lost connection with in ourselves—or qualities we've been told to suppress. A parent may favor a confident child because they've learned to doubt themselves. A leader may favor someone who shares their background, seeing in them a reflection of their own worthiness. Rabia's spiritual practice included rigorous self-examination rooted in the recognition that the Divine dwells equally in all beings. If you notice you strongly favor certain people while dismissing others, it's an invitation to look inward. What do they have that you hunger for? What do the excluded people trigger in you—perhaps shame, envy, or disowned parts of yourself? This practice transforms favoritism from a moral failure into useful information. By reclaiming the projected qualities in yourself, you become less dependent on others to make you feel whole. You can then choose relationships based on genuine connection rather than unconscious compensation. This self-awareness is the gateway to equity: you can only treat others fairly when you stop using them as mirrors for your own fragmentation.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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