anonymous
Anonymous User
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Passing by this section always scares me, so many of us are in love, have fallen out with our partners, or are finding it difficult to get over broken hearts.. that we end up living in a state of depression always wanting the very thing that causes pain and misery.
You know what, loves not actually meant to hurt. That's only the consequence of loving someone outside of marriage. It's a cliché but things don't always work out the way we want them to.
We may see ourselves as OK muslims, some as even great; praying; fasting on them nafl days; keeping a beard or even wearing niqab. But just a little trip into temptation, and it can break us. I'm no saint, I've fallen into a long spiral of situations, and when those people who I thought would help me up with a ladder, those muslims that I once used to share my most deepest thoughts with, threw me back down into the bottomless pit.
And the one's that didn't, the ones that thought they were helping me... Encouraged me to go further, to test the realms of love because they believed that we were perfect for eachother.
It didn't help.
So I found myself trapped, unable to talk anymore. I loved, and yet knew nothing about love. Because my love was tainted. It had no blessings from Allah, no foundations to grow.
So my advice.
Firstly for those in love. Think what love is? It's that funny feeling when you can't stop thinking about that person and all you want to do is rush onto msn and have a good few hours of chatting utter rubbish? No... Or is it that adrenaline when you're waiting in the park for her to come, smelling your jacket to see if her sweet scent has still remained? No... It's a bit more complicated then all of that. I think I'll get back to you on that one myself. Right now I'm trying to dust myself off from the ground, and just get on with my life. No one has helped me more than Allah. Sure it was hard, the ghosts still live. But with Him guiding me, I've allowed myself to close myself off from it. Seclusion is sometimes our greatest strength.
Secondly, for those who never gave me the ladder. Somtimes a person doesn't need to cry out for help, their sorrow and tears should be all the clues in the world. Next time when a person is down, or has fallen into the involvement with the opposite gender, don't brush them off. Listen, talk and advice. Maybe that's all they need to stop.
And lastly, to those that encourage it. The ones that are maybe involved themselves? Or they genuinely believe that this is how you find true love. Do not stir your friends emotions even more. The approval you give them may result in your questioning on the Day of Judgement, when Allah asks if you instigated the act.
Just letting it be. Simple.