This is a guest post by an amazing person who wishes to stay anonymous, may Allah Ta'ala accept his/her efforts in His way and grant him/her good beyond his/her expectations. If you benefit from the article then please remember the writer in your duas. Jazakumullahu khair.
I am holding my cup of tea and
gazing out of the window on this chilly winter morning. I’m not a tea-person
but I love feeling the warmth of the cup in my hands and the steam on the tip
of my
otherwise freezing nose. I can see the blue sky with patches of white
clouds and the dim sunlight falling on the adjacent apartments and I can hear
this beautiful morning chirping of birds. I love this part of the day. I love
mornings. Somehow the serenity and calmness of the morning always reminds me of
the serenity and calmness of my childhood and sometimes I just wish that I
could go back. I wish to go back to those early school days of innocence. Those
days when the biggest worries were what your mother gave you for lunch today. And
the biggest happiness was… well; I can’t remember what my biggest happiness was
when I was that young. May be that’s because we found happiness in every little
thing. We celebrated moments. We didn’t have smartphones, laptops, internet,
wifi-signals-not-catching to worry about. We lived in the moment. We lived in
the present. We didn’t hold on to grudges. We didn’t care if that girl called
us fat last week, we’d still want to go to the swings with her. We didn’t care
if our mother scolded us last night, we’d still want to hug her goodbye before
leaving for school. We didn’t worry about what would happen next. We were all
thoroughly convinced that everything ahead will be good. We always looked up to
the happily ever after-we trusted that God had one for us.
We were disciplined and
organized. I remember my mother giving us dinner at 7pm and tucking us in the
bed by 8pm. We would wake up early in the morning. We would have breakfast. We
would WANT to go to school. We would do our homework on time. We would pay
attention in classes. We would respect our teachers. We loved our teachers.
Everything that the teacher said was the only reality for us. Yes, we asked
questions and explored but we trusted their words. We didn’t know how to argue.
We didn’t feel insulted if we were corrected. We didn’t go into depression if
we were punished. We had no sense of entitlement. We were grateful if someone
gave us anything, no matter how small that thing was. We loved sharing. We
loved people. We were happy and content with what we had... If only life could
be that simple again.
But is it really life that has
changed or is it us? Every human is born with these genuine traits of goodness.
No one is born greedy, no one is born proud, and no one is born as a thief or a
rapist or a murderer. The Asal and
the Fitrah of each of us IS that pure
and simple. If only we don’t fall prey to the desires and the temptations of
the world, we would continue to be that pure. But this is how we are. We are
bound to make mistakes because we are humans. But every time we make a mistake,
there is that stingy feeling inside and there’s that voice that always tells us
to STOP. That same feeling you had when you lied for the first time in your
life. That feeling you had when you called someone with a bad name when you
were young. That voice that told you not to pick that cute pen and keep it in
your pocket because it didn’t belong to you. Every time we ignore that voice
and we ignore that feeling, we lose some part of our innocence, we become
somewhat numb to the reception of such feelings and we put a veil over that
voice until one day, we become completely numb and our hearts are sealed.
No counselor, parent, teacher,
friend can change anything then. The
heart becomes so hardened that even the word of God doesn’t melt it (illa ma
sha Allah – except if God wills). So, till when would you and I keep killing
that voice that comes from the inside? Are we waiting for the seal to be
placed? The seal that hardens the heart and shuts the doors of guidance, the
seal that blinds the eyes and deafens the ears, this seal gives me shivers. The
Qur’an e Kareem declares about such people:
“And We have certainly created
for Hell many of the jinn and mankind. They have hearts with which they do not
understand, they have eyes with which they do not see, and they have ears with
which they do not hear. Those are like livestock; rather, they are more astray.
It is they who are the heedless.”
-
Surah Al-A’raf, Ayah 179
As I write this deficient
collection of random thoughts, the sun outside has become brighter and my cup
of tea has finished. The chirping of the birds has become distant and I listen
to the cars as they honk. The day has started. Another day has started. And
this new day gives me new hope. It gives me that feeling that you get when you
are attempting a really lengthy exam and you have suddenly remembered the
answer to a question but you think the time is over, you don’t even have time
to look at the clock and then the invigilator says: “You have five minutes
left.” Let’s just say that this new day is like those five unexpected minutes
you get in an examination. It’s your choice now whether to sit and stare at the
paper or to pick up the pen and write without wasting any more time.