A person walks past a wall with seemingly random holes in the wall and thinks nothing of it. Another person comes by and draws a target around each hole with each hole as a perfect bulls-eye and then marvels at the wall.
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We do this dua to break our rozu every day in Ramadan. It's probably automatic for most and I think we rarely listen. There is one part I want to hear and think about every time. In the dua towards the end and when the rozu is almost over we hear "Qablas Sawal".
Literally, this means before asking.
Like all of the stuff Moula does, there's a lot of meaning here.
What's in our naseeb or what's been fated we didn't ask for. It was just given to us. We may do stuff that can affect our naseeb, but every person's naseeb is their naseeb. We didn't ask. All that happiness, all that circumstance, all that opportunity, all that health, everything. It was just given to us. It's foolish to think we earned or deserve any of it. It's not even because we prayed for it. Not in a way we can understand anyway.
There's a much bigger conclusion. We were born into this situation and given this opportunity to be in the right place at the right time. Without asking.
Taher, remember the bigger picture and think about "Qablas Sawal" every time you hear it.
There's going to be highs and lows by definition. It's natural to want to stay in the high and avoid the low. This seems like a losing strategy though. Highs will happen and they'll be great. There'll be anticipation and a rush. It'll be natural to want to stay there. There will be lows too. Perhaps much more later in life. Life is maybe designed to be that way. The lows will suck. It'll be natural to want to avoid them.
Life is going to be a rollercoaster. No doubt about it. Rollercoasters have highs and lows too. They also have these in between moments. This is where we live most of the time. A better strategy is probably to try and make these in between moments longer and better. We have the ability to change our set point.
Another analogy which I want to remember is that of a see saw. If you do it "right" you'll be in the middle a lot. Equanimity will keep you there.
The best strategy seems to be focus on the middle and spend less time at the extremes. As backwards as it sounds, the best thing seems to be feel the high for a short time; don't eliminate it or avoid itπ . Also, be in the low for a short time; don't try to eliminate it or avoid it eitherπ .
Taher, focus on the middle.
One of my very recent posts was about Karbala. I think I'm beginning to understand the limitlessness of this place and its significance. More likely, I still have no idea π
My dad did something related to Karbala, but he probably won't tell anyone. I want to brag about it though. I want to remember π because it is cool and inspiring!
Several months ago dad bought some raffle tickets to support a toloba fundraiser. The grand prize was a ticket to Karbala. I doubt dad cared about the prize. A short time after, he won the prize. Before we could even wish him mubarak, he found someone who hadn't gone and gave it to them. Wow! His first impulse was to pay it forward.
Fast forward to this past weekend...the guy who doesn't come very often found dad and thanked him. He had gone with his family to Karbala with Moula! Wow!
Taher, donate it! Taher, give it!
As I was on the treadmill this past week, I rewatched the Martian. It's a fun watch. The basic idea is that the main character gets stranded for about 2 years on Mars. For that time, he is the only person on the planet. Everything he does in service of surviving. In other words, he does only what's important. He has no distractions and he does nothing other than what is totally necessary. There's no phone, no tv, no nothing. He eventually makes it back to Earth.
There is a really cool scene at the end. He is just sitting on a bench and enjoying some coffee and not doing anything else. It seems clear that he is engrossed in his drink and what he can see. He notices a small plant growing out of the ground. He is even contrasted with people running past. He has this learned stillness. The actor does a great job of getting this across.
It's a stillness a person just learns if they've been alone for 2 years. Does it take 2 years? Does it take 6 months? Does it take an hour? It's something we can learn I think. Being still is active. It just takes practice. We don't have to go so fast. In fact, slow is almost always better.
The practice part is the hard part. That's the cold water wuzu at fajr. The more I practice the more it is apparent that it is written. Just trust. What's coming will come. There are very few things in life that require immediateness.
Taher, be still. It can probably wait.
This year in Ramadan I want to focus on two things.
The other day I overslept for fajr. It’s the first time in many years I missed doing fajr on time. There are few things that can ruin my day like missing namaz as is probably right.
Fortunately, I got to see and hear Zahra a short time later and my day wasn’t ruined. If I’m honest, missing fajr would have probably ruined my week if not for Zahra.
I have thought about this for a a few days. Once, I learned in sabaq that we can be forgiven for the SAME mistake 1,000 times a day. All we have to do is ask for forgiveness. Astagfirullah. That’s it. We can mess up 1,000 times a day. Khuda knew we’d mess up all the time every day. Part of his perfect plan is that we would mess up.
We are supposed to ask.
Taher, don’t beat yourself up for making mistakes. You were made to mess up. It’s fundamental.
Everyone is matching in blue thanks to Zahra. Even the buttons Yusuf and I are wearing coordinate. All Zahra ππ Every detail was considered.
Seeing Mom and Dad make me happy every time. They are smiling genuine smiles. Dad wore what he was told down to the coordinating mahki on his kurta saya. His socks don't match though. In his defense, no one told him to have matching socksπ.
This reminds me to focus on what's important. He is genuinely happy to be there. It shows and his socks don't matter.
I see this picture almost every day. I can't not see the socks and I have to think about what's important.
This is beautiful and deep. When something isn’t right we often have the instinct to excise or eliminate or do away with the broken and bad. Kintsugi is the art of repairing broken pottery. “Art” is very deliberately used it seems.
The broken and the bad is what makes it beautiful. This is what makes it deep. The pottery gets more valuable. It’s like wisdom. It’s earned.
It’s part of a larger and really cool philosophy. I’m just scratching the surface. It’s called wabi sabi. It’s about finding beauty in the impermanent and the imperfect. So simple, yet so difficult and wise.
There’s so much here to think about and take away. The bad stuff leads to good stuff eventually. The difficult and beautiful part is accepting it.
Taher, bad shit is going to happen. Not only bad stuff, but also not ideal stuff. Think astagfirullah and think of Kintsugi. Bad stuff will eventually lead to good stuff.
This scene is amazing. It’s about building a bridge. I have a thing for bridges. I think this scene is a metaphor though. The bridge thing is a bit on the nose.
https://youtu.be/m8Mc-38C88g?si=loZqCP-eFi-KAEJk
The scene is about all the benefit this one little bridge has been to so many people. There’s some cool math that’s a part of the reasoning.
As the scene ends, the character summarizes the benefit, 1,531 years. He says it again 1,531 years saved. The impact was huge. I think that’s the deeper meaning.
Taher, the act can be small, but the impact compounds and can be huge.
It seems the clock influences our thinking. It counts in minutes and hours. The clock conditions us to think small I think because of this.
Moula tells us that timeliness is important. He has talked about the importance of the awal waqt. We should leave a margin and prioritize what’s important.
Moula doesn’t, however, tell us to think small. In fact, my tasawur is that he’s implicitly telling us not to. Our minds can best and perhaps only comprehend the short-term.
Professionally, I’ve learned not to plan further out. Things change. Opportunities change. Personnel changes. There’s change that I can’t see coming. It’s futile to plan too far. The future is written after all. It’s going to happen whatever my plans are.
When Moula shares his wisdom to do this or that or not do this or that it’s never about the short-term. It may be something that we can only understand in the short-term and it may benefit us in the short-term. It’s long-term though. The short-term is often transformative and the way to get there.
Taher, think long-term. Think in months and years.
Today, I got to spend some time with Zahra’s dadima. It’s a treat. I see her a couple times a year. For the past couple years she hasn’t known who I am.
This visit she did. She is old and is easily in her 90s. She quite clearly remembered me this time. She even remembered me multiple times. She’s old, but she’s experienced a whole lot.
Just like she remembered my name multiple times, she shared some of the wisdom she earned multiple times. In our larger group, “himat hase tho karow” she said.
Later I sat with her just the two of us. She called me by name to sit and she said, “paysa hase tho farak nay pare”. She gestured and added, “ Himat hoi tho karow”.
She’s old, but so wise. Wise words.
Taher, money won’t matter. Do it now!
Being kind changes the world. Everyday has this potential. It doesn’t have to be a big thing either. It’s easy to say stuff like, “if I had a billion dollars, I would do all the good things”.
That’s the thing when it’s big it’s almost easier. Our brains can draw a line from the good thing through to the result. We can see the impact potentially. Nothing wrong with that. Doing big acts of kindness is amazing.
Giving grows though. Doing some small kindness is almost invisible. It takes faith to know that it’ll grow and move through the world. Trust that it will.
It’s easier to understand how someone will pay it forward. If person a does something kind for person b, b will do something for c and so on. What’s harder to understand and perhaps more satisfying is when many people independently do a small thing and collectively change someone’s day, week, month, or even life.
It happens. It’s invisible. Our brains can’t comprehend.
Taher, do the small kindness every time. It will grow. It is an opportunity.
Another post inspired by song lyrics. The lyrics are
better than I can write.
"And what about those shoes you're in today?
They'll do no good on the bridges you burnt along the way”
The lyrics are pretty good and this same or similar words show
up lots of places. I think because they’re
pretty wise. I think it’s pretty plain
too.
Be nice now, be authentic now, do whatever is good and do it
now. It applies to so much in life. It’s saying don’t wait. Don’t think short-term. It doesn’t matter if you can’t see the
long-term benefit. Have faith that it’ll
be there.
Taher, you never know.
Last night Zahra and I did some adulting. On the surface, it was a rather boring errand. We needed to buy a new washing machine. No doing a bunch of research and no finding the best deal on the internet from our phones. Just old school going to the store and figuring out what we want and buying it.
I usually refer to these errands as dates. It's grocery or Costco or something else mundane, but we get to be together. I find this fun. This is dating now and I love it.
As I think about it, on most of our errands someone usually has to do stuff. It's almost always Zahra with a list and getting the stuff our family needs. Usually, I'm just following and not helping all that much. Sometimes going slower on purpose so I can make it a few minutes longer:)
This was different though. There wasn't much to do here. We saw the few options and walked maybe 100 feet total. The salesperson was doing his salesperson thing and we were just hanging out. It was wonderful. In the middle, the salesperson asked how long we'd been together and commented he was a few years behind and hoped it would be as fun for him.
As we left, we each said thank you and good night and he said, "Thank you for entertaining me."
He recognized something in the just one hour or so. I'm sure in his job he sees lots of couples doing the boring thing we were doing. He saw that we made it fun. I even talked with Zahra about how nice that was on the way home.
I wish that for Yusuf and Nooriya. I want them to find a partner they can have fun with years later. I have the ability to help them find that person and help in other ways too.
Also, I have a lesser influence but a similar ability with so many young people while doing this TNC khidmat. It's taken years to figure out how to give back, but it's finally clear. Do this khidmat. It's frustrating at times, but it has the potential to grant someone their wish.
Taher, spend the time. You have the ability.
Smiling is on my mind again. I wrote about it before. Yusuf and Nooriya have got me saying, "it's not that deep". They might even say it about smiling. But it is that deep.
Almost 30 years ago, I learned the hadees, "Hasto chero mohabat nu jaal che". It has a lot of layers. For a long time, I took this very superficially. Just smile. That's it. Not that deep.
It is much deeper. Having a smiling face among many positive things changes my perspective. There's not much in my life that I can do so regularly and so easily that alters perspective.
This has a bunch of layers. Very likely much more than I understand. Samjo tho samjo, na samjo tho na samjo. I'm ok with not understanding. I know in my bones there's more.
Besides, I want people to think of me and remember me as that smiley guy. "Oh him? The guy who smiles all the time, right?" If anyone thought that, it would make me so happy.
Taher, I've reminded you before, smile more. In case you need any help here are two things that will always make you smile.
I’m thinking about parents and all the things they’re leaving behind. I have some of the most generous parents. My dad went above and beyond in ways that I still don’t understand. That’s how people remember him.
My other mom and dad are two of the most generous people I’ve ever met. They also gained skills professionally that could help people. My mom is a doctor and my dad is an accountant. On top of being extremely generous, they acquired skills that basically every person needs assistance with.
My biggest regret was that I didn’t do something professionally that could help people. I can occasionally and I jump at the chance. It doesn’t happen often though. No one needs an actuary.
I love TNC khidmat. It’s really rewarding and importantly I devote the time. I didn’t realize it until just recently. I do a TNC khidmat that pretty much everyone needs and it can change their life. It’s potentially the kind of impact my parents have. And I’m good at this khidmat. I only can devote so much time to it because my job allows. I just never saw it for so many years.
It’s so satisfying and fun, but also helps people hopefully be happy for their whole life.
Taher, keep putting in the time. This is legacy stuff.