Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Radical Equality as Spiritual Practice

A concrete contemplative and behavioral framework for practicing equal regard in daily interactions, meetings, and decision-making.

Rabia
Why It Matters

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.

Helpful guides
Rabia
Parenting & Community
Peri
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