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The journey of knowing yourself—of aligning with your inner calling, striving toward your purpose, and choosing to live by the principles set by Allah—has revealed something deeply unsettling to me: how normalized ignorance has become.
When you are asleep—when you drift through life comfortably, detached from your responsibilities to your Creator—people are at ease with you. Your presence fits their world. You don’t challenge anything, you don’t disrupt anything.
But the moment you begin to awaken—when you start to learn, reflect, and actively live by the guidance of the Quran—something shifts.
The same people begin to resist you.
At first, it’s subtle. They listen, they nod, they appear to agree. But gradually, discomfort surfaces. What once felt like acceptance turns into quiet tension, and then into open resistance. You’re warned. Questioned. Sometimes even ridiculed.
They begin to project fear onto you:
“That path will isolate you.”
“No one will understand you.”
“You’ll end up alone.”
And if you’re honest with yourself—it shakes you. It makes you pause. It makes you question.
But this is where clarity matters.
Not every voice around you is rooted in truth. Sometimes, it’s discomfort speaking. Sometimes, it’s fear. And sometimes, it’s simply the inability of others to accept a path they themselves are not ready to walk.
Through reflection and critical thinking, I’ve learned to observe rather than absorb.
I see the pattern now.
Awakening disrupts systems—internal and external. And not everyone is willing to confront that disruption.
So yes, the path may become lonely. It may become difficult.
But I am no longer willing to trade truth for comfort.
I am choosing to step out of inherited patterns, societal expectations, and even emotional dependencies that pull me away from what I know is right.
Because at the end of it all, this life is temporary.
And I would rather struggle here with purpose than succeed here in ignorance.