I really don't see why you can't read even more than 1 juz a day when you're married. If people blame this on marriage, they're really just looking for excuses. I think we should start to wonder what's wrong with our marriages, if we are distracting each other to the extent that we don't even have time to read the book of Allaah. Just my two cents.
Agreed. I'm not too sure of this, but to build on your point, isn't being married and fulfilling your responsibilities going to bear a higher ajr than reciting a Juz or two of Qur'aan? Because, reciting Qur'an only benefits yourself, whereas in marriage you're benefiting yourself, your spouse and society? You'd be establishing a family and raising Muslims on the methadology of the Prophet (salalahu 'alayhi wa sallam), so naturally the ajr is greater taking into account how marriage is half of the religion?
Both being single and being married have advantages and disadvantages.
The only way we can be truly happy is to love the stage of life we're currently experiencing.
You spend your single life wishing you were married, then when you get married, when the first couple of lovey dovey months are over, you start missing being single and independent.
Each part of your life is different, has different pleasures, different responsibilities, different disadvantages. But we have to live through every single one of those stages. If we're constantly rushing ahead to the next stage, or longing for the previous stage, you can never fully experience and live the stage you're currently at.
When you're a kid, enjoy being a kid, and live that stage of your life.
When you're an adult, enjoy being an adult, and live that stage of your life.
When you don't have a job, not having one, and live that stage of your life.
When you have a job, enjoy having one, and live that stage of your life.
When you're single, enjoy being single, and live that stage of your life.
When you're married, enjoy being married, and live that stage of your life.
The same reasoning can be applied to every single aspect of life. One stage isn't better or worse than the other, it's simply different.
I hope my ramblings made some sense to someone other than me..
Great perspective, indeed there is happiness in being content.
This depends on the individual I guess but I want to marry, im tired of being single
imsad
May Allaah make it easy for you and for us.
WalaikumAsSalam WaRehmatuAllah WaBarkatuhu
Excellent Answer!! On the bold writings.....say someone does all that, then don't you think they will expect so much from the marriage and get so less?? :-[
:wasalamex
No, because educating yourself about marriage isn't just about how to deal w/ your spouse, it's wider than that; one of the most crucial lessons I've learned in my research about marriage is that as a spouse, you should never ever look at your rights in the relationship and wait for them to be fulfilled, i.e. don't 'expect' any special treatment, rather you have to focus on your obligations and work hard in fulfilling that, so when you get something like say a gift or extra nice treatment from your spouse, you weren't expecting it and you value it a lot more. As Muslims we don't expect anything from any of the creation, rather we expect and place our hopes and reliance on Allaah alone, and this applies in marriage just as it does in any other aspect of life. As Umar r.a. said, few are homes that are built upon love, rather people get along by kindness and
ihsaan to one another. The problems in marriage arise when the husband wants his wife to fulfill all his rights, and she wants him to fulfill all rights due to her, and neither are concerned about their obligations. This is why educating yourself and training yourself for marriage is on par in terms of importance with choosing a proper pious spouse, because once the foundation is strong and deep, what's built upon it is sturdy and long-lasting by the permission of Allaah.
Ibn Abbas (r.a.) said the following profound statement in explanation of the following ayah from the Speech of Allaah:
{
"And they (women) have rights (over their husbands) similar (to those over their husbands) over them to what is reasonable, but men have a degree (of responsibility) over them"}[al-Baqarah; 228]
Explaining this verse, he said, "
I verily adorn myself for my wife the same as she adorns herself for me. Also I would not ask her to fulfill all the rights which she owes me, so that it would become binding upon me to fulfill all the rights which I owe her."
The narration is Hasan. So it's a two way streak, it's a partnership, it isn't an employer/client relationship; as you would like something from her, you ought to make sure you're doing the same
for her.
