Every practicing Muslim knows the weight of this battle.
You are not weak for struggling — you are human. And there is always a way back.
Because acknowledging the battle is the first step to winning it.
If you are reading this, chances are you already know the ache of wanting to do better — and finding it harder than you expected. The struggle against harraam is one of the most intimate battles a Muslim will ever face. It is private. It is exhausting. And it is one that Allah, in His infinite mercy, has already anticipated for us.
This page is not about judgment. It is not a list of prohibitions designed to shame. It is a quiet, honest look at why we fall, how the cycle grips us, and — most importantly — what we can do to find our way back to Allah with sincerity and hope.
The Prophet ﷺ said: "Every son of Adam sins, and the best of those who sin are those who repent." You are not beyond return. You are never beyond return.
What follows is divided into areas of common struggle — some general to all Muslims, some specific to brothers, some specific to sisters. Each section looks honestly at how the harraam enters our lives, why it is so difficult to leave, and what practical and spiritual steps can help.
How an innocent moment can become a chain — and how chains can be broken.
Harraam rarely announces itself. It almost never begins with a conscious decision to disobey Allah. It begins with something far smaller — a moment of curiosity, a moment of weakness, a moment of pain looking for relief. Understanding how the cycle works is essential to fighting it.
The cruelest part of this cycle is step five: the very thing causing the pain becomes the attempted cure for it. The guilt of drinking is numbed by drinking again. The shame of a sin is escaped through the same sin. This is not weakness of character — it is the physiological and psychological architecture of habit and addiction. Allah's wisdom in prohibiting these things is not arbitrary: He knows what they do to the human soul over time.
The exit from this cycle requires interrupting it — not at step five, but much earlier. That is what the rest of this page is about.
The mother of all evils — and why it is so difficult to leave.
Alcohol rarely begins as a choice made in isolation. It begins at a gathering — a wedding, a work event, a group of friends. The social pressure is immense, and the first drink is almost always framed as harmless. It tastes of belonging. The brain registers the relaxation, the laughter, the temporary silence of anxiety, and stores it as relief. From there, the pattern writes itself.
For Muslims specifically, there is also the added weight of the double life — drinking in private while maintaining appearances publicly. This hidden shame becomes its own burden, and the drink begins to serve as an escape from the shame of drinking. The cycle is particularly vicious.
Alcohol is physiologically addictive. The brain's reward pathways are rewired over time, making abstinence feel like deprivation rather than freedom. Socially, for those in environments where drinking is normalised, sobriety can feel isolating. There is also a profound spiritual dimension to this: khamr (intoxicants) are described in the Quran as an act of Shaytan specifically because they cloud the mind — and a clouded mind cannot connect to Allah. This is precisely why the enemy loves them.
Begin by changing environments, not just intentions. Remove alcohol from the home entirely. Be honest with at least one trusted person — a spouse, a close friend, a scholar. Replace the social ritual (the gathering, the glass in the hand) with something that provides community without compromise: Islamic circles, sports, volunteering. And never underestimate the power of Wudu and Salah as immediate circuit-breakers — the state of physical and spiritual purity is incompatible with the desire to poison the body.
The habit dressed up as identity — and how to undress it.
Smoking and vaping almost universally begin in adolescence or early adulthood, in environments where it signals belonging, coolness, or rebellion. The nicotine addiction sets in quickly — often within days of regular use — and thereafter the brain frames the cigarette or vape not as a want, but as a need. Anxiety, boredom, social ritual, and the post-prayer cigarette that has somehow become a habit — all of these become triggers.
Islamically, the majority of scholars consider smoking harraam or at minimum severely disliked (makruh tahrimi), given the clear evidence of self-harm — and intentional harm to the body one has been given as an amanah (trust) from Allah is prohibited. The difficulty is that, unlike alcohol which is explicitly named, the path to conviction on smoking sometimes takes longer to internalise.
Set a firm quit date and write it down — making it concrete matters. Identify your personal triggers and interrupt them: if you smoke after Fajr, go immediately to dhikr or walk instead. Replace the hand-to-mouth motion with something physical — a toothpick, prayer beads, water. Seek medical support if needed (nicotine replacement therapy is permissible). And lean into the framing of your body as an amanah: you are not just quitting for health, you are fulfilling an Islamic obligation to protect what Allah has given you.
The sin that begins long before the act — and how to guard the pathways.
Zina — any unlawful sexual act — is described in the Quran not merely as a sin but as a pathway: "Do not come near to zina." The phrasing is significant. Allah does not only prohibit the act — He prohibits the approach. Because it never begins with the act. It begins with a glance that lingers. A message that crosses a line. A private conversation that grows intimate. A friendship that slowly becomes something else. Each step seems small. Each step takes you one step further from the exit.
Guard the eyes — this is the first gate, and it is the one most consistently mentioned in Quran and Sunnah. Guard private communication with non-mahram individuals; if a conversation cannot be had openly, it should not be had at all. Maintain halal outlets: for those who are able, marriage is the prophetic prescription. For those who are not yet married, fasting is the Sunnah prescription for dampening desire. Build accountability — a trusted friend, a Sheikh, someone who asks. And know that guilt after a sin is a sign of iman still alive. Do not let Shaytan use that guilt to drive you further away.
The most private struggle — the one most rarely spoken of, and the one most widely fought.
This topic is rarely spoken of in khutbahs or Islamic circles, which leaves millions of Muslims fighting it entirely alone, convinced they are uniquely weak or broken. They are not. This struggle is extraordinarily common among both men and women, single and married. The silence around it is part of what gives it power. The majority of scholars consider it prohibited or disliked, particularly when accompanied by pornography — which is an additional harm with its own devastating effects on the mind and relationships.
The brain's reward system treats this habit with the same mechanisms as substance addiction. Dopamine pathways are reinforced, and over time the habit becomes an automatic response to boredom, stress, loneliness, or even certain times of day. The accompanying guilt deepens feelings of worthlessness, which trigger the very emotional states that fuel the urge. It is one of the more perfect traps Shaytan sets — shame keeping you from the very spiritual tools (Salah, Quran, community) that would help you leave.
Identify your triggers ruthlessly — time of day, emotional state, device usage, being alone. Remove pornography access entirely (app blockers, accountability software). Never be bored and alone with a device — replace those moments with movement, social contact, or dhikr. Lower your gaze throughout the day: small acts of guarding the eyes upstream reduce pressure downstream. Seek marriage if it is possible. Fast regularly. And speak to a trusted scholar or counsellor — the shame of speaking is far smaller than the weight of carrying it alone for years.
What begins as background becomes a worldview.
Music, films, and online content that normalise immorality rarely shock at first — they desensitise gradually. What once felt uncomfortable becomes familiar, then neutral, then appealing. The content that fills our eyes and ears shapes our desires, our language, our sense of what is normal and what is aspirational. This is why the Islamic tradition is cautious about the environment of the soul, not just its actions.
The debate among scholars on music is nuanced, but there is near-consensus on content that promotes lust, violence, drugs, or kufr. The question to ask is not always "is this halal?" but "is this bringing me closer to Allah or further from Him?"
Replace rather than simply restrict. The human soul needs beauty and emotional nourishment — Quran recitation (particularly with a beautiful voice), nasheeds, the sounds of nature, Islamic lectures that move the heart. Be intentional about what fills your ears during your commute, your housework, your idle moments. Those are not neutral spaces — they are hours of formation.
The harraam that feels like connection — and costs more than we know.
Backbiting (gheebah) is likened in the Quran to eating the flesh of one's dead brother — an image so visceral it should stop us cold, yet one of the most prevalent sins in Muslim social life. It persists because it feels like bonding. Talking about others creates intimacy. Gossip generates social currency. The circle that laughs together about someone else is a circle that feels close. But the closeness is built on harm to another, and it leaves a residue on the heart that accumulates quietly over time.
The Prophet ﷺ gave us a simple test: before speaking about someone, ask — is it true? Is it kind? Is it necessary? If you cannot leave a gathering without it turning to others' faults, consider whether that gathering is serving your soul. Change the subject with grace. Speak in defence of the absent. And remember: on the Day of Judgment, our good deeds will be transferred to those we wronged through our tongues.
The harraam that has been normalised by an entire economic system.
Riba is one of the most severely warned against prohibitions in the Quran — Allah declares war on those who persist in it. Yet it is perhaps the harraam most universally engaged in by Muslims in the West, because the entire financial infrastructure — mortgages, credit cards, student loans, overdrafts — is built on it. The gradual entry is easy to understand: "I have no choice." "Everyone does it." "The scholars disagree." Over time, the unease fades entirely.
This is a genuine difficulty that deserves genuine engagement, not dismissal. Seek out Islamic financial products (Islamic mortgages, halal investment platforms) — they exist and are growing. Consult a qualified scholar about your specific situation rather than applying a blanket fatwa found online. Work toward financial situations that reduce dependence on interest-based products over time. And be honest with yourself about the difference between genuine constraint and convenient rationalisation.
The sin that destroys others and ourselves.
The Prophet ﷺ was asked three times for advice and three times he said: "Do not be angry." Uncontrolled anger is not merely a bad habit — it is a gateway through which many other sins enter. Words spoken in rage cannot be unsaid. Relationships destroyed in anger are often never fully repaired. Decisions made in anger — financial, relational, professional — carry consequences that outlast the emotion by years. Shaytan loves the moment of rage because the Muslim in that moment is most unlike themselves.
The Sunnah gives us precise prescriptions: seek refuge in Allah from Shaytan. Change your physical position (if standing, sit; if sitting, lie down). Make Wudu — the cool water interrupts the physiological state of anger. Leave the space. Be silent. And practice the longer-term habits that reduce baseline anger: regular sleep, honest communication, dua for those who wrong you, and the consistent remembrance of how small our grievances are before the mercy of Allah.
The habit that builds a world one must continuously maintain.
A single lie requires multiple lies to sustain. Deception creates a parallel reality that must be constantly managed — an exhausting, corrosive way to live. The Prophet ﷺ warned that lying leads to wickedness, and wickedness leads to the Fire. More practically: a life of deception makes authentic connection impossible. You cannot be truly known by anyone, and that isolation feeds other sins. Truthfulness (sidq), by contrast, is described as the foundation of all good character — not because it is easy, but because it aligns the inner and outer self.
Begin with small commitments. Resolve that for one day, you will not exaggerate, not even in casual speech. Notice how often the impulse to deceive arises — in social situations, in self-presentation, in explaining mistakes. Each time you choose truth over comfort, you are strengthening something essential in your character. Make dua to be among the Siddiqeen — the profoundly truthful. And know that Allah sees both what you say and what you conceal.
Where beauty culture meets Islamic practice — and how to navigate the tension.
Fake nails and most conventional nail polishes are a problem in Islamic practice for a specific and practical reason: they create a barrier that prevents water from reaching the nails during Wudu, thereby invalidating it — and every Salah performed on that Wudu. This is not a cosmetic preference; it is a matter of the validity of prayer itself. For a practicing Muslimah, this sits at the heart of her daily worship.
The pressure to conform to beauty standards that include elaborate nails is real, particularly in the West, where it is a form of social currency and self-expression. Social media amplifies this pressure enormously. The pull is not shallow — it is a pull toward belonging, toward femininity as the surrounding culture defines it.
Water-permeable (breathable) nail polish has become widely available and is considered permissible by many scholars when water genuinely passes through (it is worth verifying individual products). Beautiful nail care without polish — filing, buffing, using halal nail strengtheners — is a valid alternative. Some sisters choose to wear nail polish only during menstruation when they are not praying, removing it before their next cycle ends. What matters most is that the path to Allah through Salah is never blocked by a lifestyle choice that can be adapted.
The gradual retreat that begins with "just this once."
Very few sisters make a single dramatic decision to abandon the hijab. It happens incrementally. The scarf worn loosely. The fringe showing. The scarf removed in the car, then at the restaurant, then outdoors altogether. Each step feels like a small compromise, and each compromise makes the next one easier. The catalyst is almost always external pressure — workplace environments, marriage prospects, family disapproval, a desire to be seen as "normal" — combined with an inner voice that says Allah will understand.
The grief of a sister who has drifted from her hijab is often profound. She often feels she has lost something of her identity, of her relationship with Allah, and she does not know how to return without facing the public acknowledgment of having left. This grief deserves compassion, not judgment.
Return to the why before you focus on the how. Reconnect with the spiritual meaning of the hijab — not as a rule imposed from outside, but as a declaration of identity, a form of worship, and a protection. Read the stories of women who returned. Seek community with sisters who wear it with joy and conviction, not resentment. Make the intention private, between you and Allah, before making it public. And remember: the hijab you wear imperfectly and with a sincere heart is more beloved to Allah than the hijab worn perfectly without one.
The nuanced territory between adornment and prohibition.
The Prophet ﷺ explicitly cursed the one who attaches false hair and the one who requests it. This refers specifically to human hair extensions — the use of synthetic wigs and hairpieces for medical reasons (hair loss, illness) is treated more leniently by scholars. The issue is not about beauty itself — Islam encourages a wife to beautify herself for her husband — but about deception and the specific prohibition on this form of alteration.
The beauty industry pushes hair extensions powerfully, particularly in communities where long, voluminous hair is a marker of femininity. The entrance is often gradual: clip-ins for a wedding, then more regularly, then weaves and extensions as a baseline. By the time the habit is established, it feels inseparable from appearance and self-image.
Begin with knowledge — consult a qualified scholar about your specific circumstances. Invest in learning to love and care for your natural hair; many sisters find that the journey away from extensions becomes a journey toward genuine self-acceptance. For Muslimahs who cover, the external pressure of hair standards is reduced — the hijab itself can be a liberation from the hair extension industry entirely.
Permanent marks, and the question of what we carry on our bodies.
Tattoos are near-universally considered harraam in Islam due to explicit hadith — the Prophet ﷺ cursed both the one who tattoos and the one who is tattooed. Yet in Western contexts, they have become deeply embedded in social identity — street culture, sports, music, the military, even fashion. For Muslim men navigating those worlds, particularly in youth, the pull is often about belonging and masculinity. "It's just art." "It's my story." "It doesn't affect my deen."
For those who have already received tattoos before practising Islam, or before knowing the ruling: know that scholars generally hold that existing tattoos do not invalidate Wudu or Salah, and that sincere repentance is accepted by Allah. You are not less a Muslim for having them. The obligation is to not add more, not to remove what cannot easily be undone.
Ask yourself honestly what need you are trying to meet — identity, belonging, remembrance, self-expression. Then ask whether there is a halal way to meet that same need. Many brothers who step back from the tattooing culture describe the distance as clarifying — they find they were trying to mark something on their skin that they needed to cultivate in their character instead.
The adornments that are halal for women and harraam for men — and why the line matters.
Gold jewellery and silk garments are explicitly prohibited for Muslim men. This is not a matter of scholarly debate — it is established by sound, repeatedly transmitted hadith. Yet gold chains, gold rings (other than a simple silver wedding ring), and silk blends are common in Muslim male fashion, particularly in certain cultural contexts where they are markers of status and success.
The issue often enters through cultural inheritance — it is "what men in the family wear," it is "traditional dress." The prohibition is rarely emphasised in cultural Muslim households, so many brothers simply do not know. Once they do, the attachment to a gold chain worn for years, given by a father or grandmother, can be genuinely difficult to navigate emotionally.
Begin with knowledge and conviction, not shame. Understand the wisdom: Islam neither strips men of adornment nor feminises them — it gives them silver, it gives them fine fabrics, it gives them dignity. The gold and silk that are permitted for women are reserved for women. Accepting this distinction is an act of submission that, like all submission to Allah's wisdom, carries a particular sweetness when embraced willingly.
The Sunnah most easily rationalised away — and what keeping it costs.
The beard is an Islamic identity marker — and identity markers have always attracted resistance. The professional pressures are real: "You'll look more approachable clean-shaven." "The interview will go better." "My workplace has appearance standards." These are not invented concerns. But they are also, in the vast majority of cases, challenges that can be navigated rather than surrendered to.
The gradual erosion is familiar: a trim that becomes a close crop, a close crop that becomes a stubble maintained just below the threshold. The rationalisation shifts too — from "I'll grow it back" to "this length is probably fine" to no longer thinking about it. What began as a sacrifice to external pressure becomes internalised as preference.
Grow it with intention and without apology. The brother who explains calmly, confidently, and without defensiveness why he keeps his beard often finds that the world accommodates him far more readily than he feared. Surround yourself with brothers who carry the Sunnah with dignity. And allow the beard to do something the clean-shaven face cannot: remind you multiple times a day, when you catch your reflection, of who you are and Whose servant you are trying to be.
Not a checklist, but a path — walked one step at a time.
Whatever your struggle, the following principles apply. They are drawn from Quran, Sunnah, and the accumulated wisdom of those who have walked this road before you and found their way back. None of them is magic. All of them require sincerity.
The heart that asks Allah not to let it go astray is a heart that already understands its own vulnerability. It is one of the most honest prayers in the Quran. Recite it. Own it. Let it be the daily acknowledgment that you need Allah's help to stay on the path — and that needing His help is not a sign of weakness but of knowing Him.
"Whoever knows himself knows his Lord. And whoever knows his Lord knows that no sin is too great for His forgiveness, and no soul is too far gone to return."
— A Reflection for the Struggling SoulYou are not the sum of your sins. You are the sum of your returns. Every time you pick yourself up, make Wudu, and face your Lord again — that is the story Allah is writing about you. May He make it a beautiful one.