cogentclips
cogentclips
Cogent Clips
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cogentclips · 4 months ago
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We want to make religion as small as ourselves; just as we have made our homes as ugly as ourselves. -Abdal Hakim Murad (Contentions 3:85)
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cogentclips · 4 months ago
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Imām Shāfi‘ī was asked, “How did you get such good character?” he replied, “By taking my critics seriously.”
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cogentclips · 2 years ago
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as-Salaamu’Alaykum,
Shaykh ‘Abd al-Hakim Murad Timothy John Winter said, “We, Muslims, do a pretty good job of turning ourselves into a badge of identity, a stick with which to beat other Muslims, ways of feeling good about ourselves - all kinds of things that we use the sunnah for. But to use it as a human form that represents liberation from the modern prison is generally not the way that we consider it, unfortunately. Often, it is just another huzhuzh an-nafs, what the ego desires.”
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cogentclips · 3 years ago
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A man came to AbĂ» ‘AlĂź ad-DaqqĂąq and said, “I have come to you from a very distant place.” AbĂ» ‘AlĂź ad-DaqqĂąq replied, “Attaining knowledge of the path has nothing to do with traversing great distances and undergoing journeys. Separate from yourself even by one single step, and your goal will be reached.”
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cogentclips · 4 years ago
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That a specialist would dismiss the link between body and mind was not astonishing. Dualism—cleaving into two that which is one—colours all our beliefs on health and illness. We attempt to understand the body in isolation from the mind. We want to describe human beings—healthy or otherwise—as though they function in isolation from the environment in which they develop, live, work, play, love and die. These are the built-in, hidden biases of the medical orthodoxy that most physicians absorb during their training and carry into their practice.
Gabor Mate
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cogentclips · 4 years ago
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I am displeased with the company of friends To whom my bad qualities appear to be good. They fancy my faults are virtues and perfection. My thorns they believe to be rose and jessamine. Say. Where is the bold and quick enemy to make me aware of my defects? He whose faults are not told him Ignorantly thinks his defects are virtues.
' Shaikh S'adi
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cogentclips · 4 years ago
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It doesn't matter how many tasbihs you hold, or how many mawlids you attend, or how many shuyukh you accompany, or how many claims you make, or how many ijazahs you collect - if you look down on any believer and you have arrogance in your heart - you are a false claimant to this path. You're not a person of Tasawwuf. Tasawwuf is nothing but good character and humility. If you think for a second that you are more pious than another Muslim because you do such-and-such action and you sit in the gatherings of so-and-so then you have destroyed your actions.
Habib 'Umar bin Hafiz
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cogentclips · 5 years ago
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We are not, as traditional western thought would have us assume, solitary, self-encapsulated beings. Rather, we are porous 'openings' to the world, whose very biology, development and experiencing is interspersed and infused with the beingness of others. And if we are beings who are dispersed across relationships, then psychological healing must also, in many instances, involve this interpersonal nexus.
Dave Mearns
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cogentclips · 5 years ago
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Love, it turns out, is intimately related to attention...To love is to extend oneself toward another or toward oneself...It so happens that this is also the precise meaning of giving attention to another person or to oneself. The origin of the word attend is the Latin tendere, "to stretch." Attend means to extend, to stretch toward. If we can actively love, there will be no attention deficit and no disorder.
Gabor Maté, Scattered Minds
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cogentclips · 5 years ago
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Healing isn't fully healing if it doesn't in some way connect the individual to the community... We heal so that communities can take on healing as part of their everyday ways of being.
Susan Raffo
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cogentclips · 5 years ago
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In order to fundamentally change one's narratives, hidden loyalties and unhealthy patterns, one will have to be willing to lose much of what is called identity. That is grueling, leaves one empty at times before something new can emerge and one has to learn to sit with the discomfort. But it's worth it, for those who really want change, first within themselves and (only) then in the world.
Tijana Ć arac
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cogentclips · 5 years ago
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One does not become enlightened by imagining figures of light, but by making the darkness conscious.
C.G. Jung
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cogentclips · 5 years ago
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It takes more courage to examine the dark corners of your own soul than it does for a soldier to fight on a battlefield.
W.B. Yeats
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cogentclips · 5 years ago
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Islam is not an extension of your ego.
Abdal Hakim Murad
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cogentclips · 5 years ago
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Beware of your inner Pharaoh, Who dresses up like Moses. Seemingly outwardly religious, And claiming Aaron's gnosis. We've seen this all before, we have From the time that time forgot. It's the oldest story that we know, Of the devil and his lot.
Nader Khan
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cogentclips · 5 years ago
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You may say, “If advice includes mentioning faults, then it includes alienation of the heart and how can that come into the duty of Brotherhood?" So you must realize that alienation only results from mentioning a fault already known to your brother, while drawing his attention to what he is unaware of is compassion itself. It is encouragement for hearts; I mean the hearts of the intelligent, for it does not touch the hearts of fools.
Ghazali
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cogentclips · 5 years ago
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There is no good in a people who do not advise; and there is no good in a people who do not like those who advise.
Umar ibn Al-Khattab
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