A concrete contemplative and behavioral framework for practicing equal regard in daily interactions, meetings, and decision-making.
Rabia practiced what might be called radical equality—she welcomed the poor, the sick, and the powerful with the same openness and love. This was not passive neutrality but active practice: consciously noticing bias, interrupting preference, and training the heart toward equal regard. In modern settings, this might look like: ensuring every voice is heard in meetings (not just the confident or senior); rotating whose ideas get implemented; giving equal time and attention to each child or student; examining whose work gets cited and whose gets forgotten. The practice is spiritual because it reshapes consciousness. When we actively practice equality, we discover how deeply favoritism runs—in micro-expressions, in who we make eye contact with, in whose name we remember. The practice also reveals the fear beneath favoritism: that if we don't privilege certain people, we won't secure belonging or safety. Rabia's model invites us to practice trust: that genuine community is built on equal regard, and that love multiplies rather than diminishes when it is shared without preference. This is a daily discipline, not a one-time shift.
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