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My health grief comes in waves, one minute I could be fine and the next I’m realizing how much I can’t do anymore and how much my life has changed. It may be in the little things, like realizing I can’t do anything for very long without symptoms popping up, or realizing that a new symptom has gone unnoticed. Sometimes it’s bigger things, like quitting a job or school, realizing I can’t take showers standing up, or that some of my hobbies have been abandoned due to how much energy they take up. I grieve at these things, sometimes I’ll crack under it all, even if it may seem small to outsiders, something as little as someone making an ignorant comment can set it off. I feel tired and sad and just utter devastation that my life has changed irreparably.
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“Grief, I’ve learned, is really just love. It’s all the love you want to give, but cannot. All that unspent love gathers up in the corners of your eyes, the lump in your throat, and in that hollow part of your chest. Grief is just love with no place to go.”
― Jamie Anderson
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رَبِّ ٱبْنِ لِى عِندَكَ بَيْتًۭا فِى ٱلْجَنَّةِ
"My Lord! Build me a house in Paradise near You."
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Do you really want it?
Do you wake up in the middle of the night, asking your Lord for it? Have you given up sins for it? Have you sought the hours when du’as are accepted for it?
Or do you just say you want it, make a lazy du’a once in a while, and continue in your old ways, hoping that your du’a will get accepted this way?
Again, do you really want it?
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"O Allah, let the best of my lifetime be its ending, and my best deed be that which I seal (my life with), and the best of my days the Day I meet You."
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من المروءة التغافل عن عثرات الناس، وإشعارهم أنك لا تعلم لأحد منهم عثرة.
Part of nobility is overlooking people’s faults and making them feel as if you are unaware of any of their missteps.
ابن القيم | مدارج السالكين ط: عطاءات العلم (١٠٦/٣)
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“Someone somewhere is searching for you in every person they meet.”
— Unknown
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When Allah wills for you to be full, He inspires you to eat by placing a feeling of emptiness in your stomach.
When He wills to quench your thirst, He places a dryness in your throat that moves you to drink.
When He wills to give you something else of this world or the next, He fills your heart with a strong feeling of fear or desire that moves you to dua.
We think we started the dua. How do you know it's not the other way around?
In all cases, it was the will of Allah that came first. Hence the ulama agree on the saying: "When Allah inspires you towards dua, then know that He wants to give you." Others added, "know that He wants to give you what you ask for, no matter how grand or far off it seems."
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Someone being patient with you on your bad days is one of the softest forms of love
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Ramadan Day 19
Please visit:
RevertHelp Team Website
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