The parts left out of the khutbah.
The things you only learn by living them.
Because you deserve the real picture, not just the beautiful one.
There is a version of practising Islam that gets talked about a lot. The peace. The clarity. The sense of purpose. The community. The sweetness of iman. And all of that is real — genuinely, profoundly real. But it is not the whole picture. And presenting only that half leaves new Muslims confused, born Muslims disillusioned, and everyone somewhere in between feeling like they are failing at something they are actually doing quite normally.
This page is for the person who picked up their prayer mat and felt nothing. For the one who made tawbah sincerely and fell back into the same sin three days later. For the one who became more practising and somehow felt more lonely. For the one who loves Allah and is also exhausted and also struggling and also, on some days, wondering why nobody warned them.
Consider this that warning — and that reassurance. What you are experiencing is not a sign that you are failing. It is a sign that you are in it, fully and honestly.
What happens inside, in the private spaces between you and Allah.
Nobody tells you that iman goes up and down. Not just slightly — dramatically. There will be weeks where the Quran moves you to tears and the prayers feel like oxygen. And there will be weeks where you pray five times mechanically, feel nothing, read nothing, and wonder if something is fundamentally wrong with you.
It is not. The Companions of the Prophet ﷺ used to say to each other: "Come, let us renew our faith for an hour" — because they too felt it waning. The fluctuation of iman is so well-documented in Islamic tradition that there is a specific concept for it: iman increases with obedience and decreases with sin and heedlessness. It is a living thing, not a switch.
The khushoo — the focus and presence in prayer — that scholars describe sounds extraordinary when you read about it. And occasionally, you will taste it. But a great deal of your Salah, for a long time, will feel like standing and sitting and reciting words while your mind wanders to your inbox, your argument from yesterday, what you need to buy from the supermarket.
Nobody tells you this. And so when it happens, people assume they are uniquely distracted or spiritually deficient. They are not. Ibn al-Qayyim wrote extensively about the struggle of the wandering mind in prayer. The great scholars struggled with it. The prescription is not to wait until you feel it — it is to show up anyway, to work toward presence, and to understand that a prayer offered with sincerity despite distraction is still a prayer accepted.
When you begin to practise more seriously, a gap often opens between you and the world you previously inhabited. Old friends who shared your habits no longer fit as naturally. Family gatherings have moments that feel uncomfortable. The social life built around things you are now avoiding leaves a space that is not immediately filled.
This loneliness is not a sign that you have made the wrong choice. It is the friction of becoming. The path narrows before it opens. And the community — the real, nourishing, honest community — does exist. But it must be found and sometimes built, and that takes time. In the interval, the loneliness is real and it deserves to be acknowledged rather than spiritually bypassed with easy reassurances.
Before you cared, you did not feel much guilt. After you began to care, the awareness of your own shortcomings sharpens dramatically. Every lapse in prayer, every moment of anger, every sin feels heavier because you now know better. This is deeply disorienting — people expect practice to bring peace, and then find themselves more consciously troubled than before.
What is actually happening is that your conscience is working. A heart that feels guilt at sin is a heart that is alive to Allah. The numbness of before was not contentment — it was distance. The sensitivity you now feel is a sign of closeness, not failure. The task is not to eliminate the guilt but to channel it correctly: into tawbah, into growth, not into shame that paralyses.
The romanticised version of tawbah goes like this: you reach a breaking point, you weep, you repent sincerely, you change, and you never return to that sin again. And sometimes — sometimes — it does happen that way. But more often, tawbah is a practice of returning. You fall. You repent. You get up. You fall again, perhaps the same way. You repent again. You get up again.
People who do not know this give up after the first relapse. They conclude that their tawbah was not sincere, that they are beyond help, that Allah has tired of them. None of this is true. The Prophet ﷺ told us that the one who repents from sin is like the one who has no sin. He did not say: the one who repents once and never sins again. He said: the one who repents. The action, ongoing. The returning, again and again.
What happens between you and the world — and between you and other Muslims.
When you begin to practise more visibly — the hijab, the beard, the declining of certain invitations, the prayer breaks at work — people notice. And a significant number of them will have opinions. Some will be curious and kind. Others will be dismissive ("You've become religious"). Others will be actively hostile, particularly in environments where religion is seen as backward or where Islam specifically carries stigma.
What nobody tells you is that this scrutiny is exhausting. You will spend energy explaining yourself that you did not budget for. You will have conversations about your faith in settings where you did not choose to have them. And sometimes the people pushing hardest will be people you love and whose approval you have always valued.
Nobody tells you that the masjid can have politics. That the Islamic community can be cliquey, judgmental, and sometimes the first place to make a new or struggling Muslim feel unwelcome. That the people with the longest beards or the most visible piety are not always the most merciful or the most trustworthy. That cultural Islam — the customs and prejudices of particular ethnic communities dressed up as deen — can cause real harm to real people.
This is not a reason to leave or to lose faith in the ummah. It is a reason to have accurate expectations. The community is made of humans, and humans — all of them, including the practising ones — are works in progress. The deen is perfect. The people practising it are not. Separating these two things will protect your faith from the disillusionment that comes from expecting a perfect community and encountering a real one.
When your values shift, some friendships cannot travel with you. Friends built around going out drinking, around certain conversations, around a shared worldview that you no longer hold — those friendships are tested, and some of them do not survive the test. Nobody warns you that this is coming, and so when it happens it carries an extra weight of surprise alongside the grief.
Let yourself grieve those friendships. They were real. The people were real. The loss is real. Islam does not require you to pretend that letting go of meaningful relationships costs nothing. What it asks is that you make the letting-go from a place of principle rather than contempt — that you wish those people well even as you can no longer walk the same road. And that you trust that the road ahead holds its own people, who will know the fuller version of you.
The Quran speaks extensively about the rights of parents, the duty to family, the importance of maintaining kinship ties. What it does not sugarcoat — and what is rarely discussed openly — is how painful it is when the very family you are commanded to honour is also the source of your most significant tests. Parents who disapprove of your practice. Siblings who mock the changes. Extended family gatherings that feel like navigating a minefield of values that clash with yours at every turn.
The instruction to honour parents does not require you to agree with them, obey them in what displeases Allah, or absorb their disapproval without internal cost. It requires kindness, patience, maintaining the relationship, and not cutting them off. That is a genuinely difficult line to walk. Many Muslims walk it for years, imperfectly, doing their best. That is what is being asked of you — not perfection, but sincere effort.
The things that are also true — and also rarely said.
It does not happen immediately. For a long time, prayer is a discipline — something you do because you are supposed to, something you schedule around life. And then, quietly, without a single dramatic moment, it shifts. The prayer becomes the anchor. The five points in the day around which everything else arranges itself. The place you go when things fall apart because it is the only place that reliably makes sense.
People who have not experienced this find it difficult to understand. People who have find it almost impossible to articulate. But it is real, and it is waiting for you — not as a reward for perfect practice, but as a natural consequence of sustained presence. You do not manufacture it. You show up, day after day, and one day you notice it has arrived.
The things you gave up — or are in the process of giving up — are often things the world insists are necessary for a full life. The parties. The status markers. The constant availability on social media. The frantic accumulation. From outside the deen, these look like sacrifices. From inside, a surprising number of them turn out to feel like relief.
There is a word in Arabic — zuhd — often translated as "asceticism" but more accurately meaning freedom from attachment to worldly things. Not poverty, not joylessness, but the particular lightness of not needing what the world is selling. It takes time to arrive at. But when it begins to settle, even partially, it changes the texture of everyday life in ways that are genuinely difficult to explain to someone who has not felt it.
After the loneliness, after the drift away from old friendships, something else happens. You begin to find the people who are also on this road. And the friendships built around a shared relationship with Allah are different from others in ways that are hard to quantify but immediately felt. There is a directness to them, a mutual accountability, a capacity for honesty that rests on shared values. You can speak about what matters to you without translation.
The Prophet ﷺ said that two people who love each other for the sake of Allah will be shaded by His Throne on the Day when there is no shade. That quality of love — chosen not for social utility but for something deeper — is rarer than ordinary friendship and worth the wait and the search.
This one is almost impossible to write about, because language fails it. But it happens. A moment — sometimes in prayer, sometimes in a moment of crisis, sometimes in an ordinary Tuesday afternoon — where the knowledge that Allah is present becomes not a belief you hold intellectually but something you feel with the whole of your being. Where Allahu Akbar is not a phrase you say but a reality you inhabit, briefly, completely.
These moments cannot be manufactured or scheduled. They arrive as gifts. They do not last at full intensity — they are not meant to, because we could not function if they did. But they are remembered. And the memory of them sustains the practice through the dry seasons, the empty prayers, the fluctuating iman. They are the evidence your heart carries forward that all of this — the struggle, the discipline, the sacrifice — is in relationship with something absolutely real.
The person who reads a page like this and recognises themselves in it — in the emptiness of some prayers, in the guilt that returns, in the loneliness, in the family tension — that person is not failing at Islam. They are practising it. Honestly, imperfectly, persistently.
The ideals are real. The peace is real. The sweetness of iman is real. They are just not permanent states that you arrive at and inhabit forever. They are moments within a longer journey, interspersed with struggle, with ordinariness, with the slow and largely invisible work of becoming.
Allah does not ask you to be perfect. He knows you cannot be — He made you. What He asks is that you keep returning. That you not despair. That the thread between you and Him remains — however thin it gets in the hard seasons — unbroken.
"The believer is not the one who never falls. The believer is the one who, every time he falls, looks up."
— A Reflection for the Practising Soul