How favoring certain group members creates internal division, requiring us to suppress parts of ourselves depending on whom we're with.
Favoritism fragmentizes identity by forcing different presentations of self for different audiences. When organizations or families privilege certain members, others adapt by hiding authentic selves, creating psychological compartmentalization. Rabia's teaching emphasized unity of soul—a self undivided by performance or pretense. Tribalism, the sibling of favoritism, asks us to adopt group values uncritically and reward those who conform most visibly. The cost accumulates as alienation from our own integrity. We become strangers to ourselves, performing preferred identities in some contexts while suppressing genuine expression elsewhere. In workplaces, this manifests as the "in-group" members who enjoy psychological safety versus those who self-censor constantly. Rabia's path of pure devotion dissolves these artificial boundaries by treating all beings as worthy of our whole, integrated self. Examining favoritism requires asking: in which relationships do I feel free to be complete, and where do I fracture myself?
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.