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Hi fariend how r you ❤️
Saudi Arabia reyidh ❤️🇸🇦🇵🇰💖

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Nobody prepares you how to handle a kid alone is difficult 😭. I'm tired 😴

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Hi how are you everyone

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Anonymous

9 days ago

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Assalamu Alaikum,

I am a 26-year-old Pakistani Pashtun currently working in Al Ain, UAE. I am a hardworking, responsible, and family-oriented person. I am looking for a sincere marriage with a respectful, kind, and family-valuing life partner.

My goal is to build a happy and stable family based on trust, respect, and understanding. If you think we may be compatible, I would be happy to discuss further through our families or in a respectful manner.

Thank you.

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this Dunya Breaks me Allah hears me i 😭cry alone But he comes near me the world🌏 is loud But his peace is clear so i Whisper Ya allah stay near some day 😀 smile most of 📅 Days fake it so much pressure💨 i can barely take it

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Raising a child with autism and adhd: a compassionate approach to salāh and religious upbringing

By: Dr Mohammad Akram Nadwi
Oxford
2/6/2026

Question:
Assalamualaikum shaykh,
My son is 9 years old and has been diagnosed with autism and ADHD. He can speak and do lots of things normally, however his difficulty is more related to sensory difficulty and emotional regulation.
Some of the symptoms of these conditions is that he struggles with washing/water, he experiences demands from others as extremely intense pressure, and also struggles with changing states (ie from one activity to another).
As per the sunnah, we have been encouraging him to pray salah since he is 7 years old. It has been very difficult, as he finds the water of doing wudhu difficult (he also struggles to shower regularly), and also the stillness of salah and the changing of activity also dysregulates him severely and he goes into shut down.
We have tried to reduce the demand, by encouraging him to do tayamum where he struggles to do Wudhu, and pray in whatever state (eg seated), as long as he prays.
I know that at 10 years old you are allowed to use discipline to encourage salah- but we also dont want to put a bad relationship between him and salah and worry that forcing him to do it properly will put him off salah.
He is a boy who otherwise loves to please Allah swt, loves to learn about Islam, and follow our deen.
What do you recommend we focus on as parents given his difficulty? What concessions are acceptable once he becomes baligh? Any general advice on the situation is much appreciated.

Answer:
Wa alaykum al-salām wa raḥmatullāhi wa barakātuh.
May Allah Most High bless you and your family, reward you abundantly for your concern and dedication, and grant your son every success in this world and the next.

From your description, the most striking aspect of your situation is not your son's difficulties, but rather the blessing that Allah has bestowed upon him. You describe a child who loves Allah, enjoys learning about Islam, seeks to please his Lord, and takes an interest in the religion. This is a tremendous gift and one that should be cherished and protected. Many parents spend years striving to cultivate within their children a love for Allah and His Messenger ﷺ; by Allah's grace, that love already appears to be present in your son. In my view, preserving and nurturing that love should remain the central objective in his religious upbringing.

It is important at the outset to remember that your son is still a child. He has not yet reached puberty, and therefore the obligations of the Sacred Law have not yet become binding upon him. The Prophet ﷺ taught us that the pen is lifted from the child until he reaches maturity. Although children are encouraged to learn and practise acts of worship before puberty, this period is one of training, familiarisation, and preparation. It is not a period of legal accountability. Parents sometimes become so focused on teaching the outward performance of worship that they inadvertently lose sight of this distinction. Yet the purpose of encouraging prayer before puberty is not to impose obligations before their time, but to help a child grow in love of worship and become accustomed to it gradually and naturally.

This distinction becomes even more significant when a child faces genuine developmental challenges. Children with autism and ADHD often experience the world in ways that are not immediately apparent to those around them. What appears to others to be a simple request may, for them, involve immense effort and distress. Washing with water, interrupting a preferred activity, transitioning from one state to another, remaining still for several minutes, coping with unfamiliar sensory experiences, or responding to what they perceive as a demand can all be profoundly challenging. What is sometimes mistaken for stubbornness, laziness, or wilful refusal may in reality be a manifestation of sensory overload, anxiety, emotional dysregulation, or genuine incapacity.

For this reason, it is essential that parents approach such children with insight, patience, and mercy. The shari`ah itself is founded upon these principles. Allah says: "Allah intends ease for you and does not intend hardship for you." He also says: "Allah does not burden a soul beyond its capacity." And He says: "So fear Allah as much as you are able." These are not merely general words of encouragement; they are foundational principles upon which countless legal rulings are built. The Sharīʿah is not blind to human weakness, nor does it ignore the realities of hardship and limitation. Rather, it recognises them and accommodates them.

In light of this, I would encourage you to continue approaching your son with gentleness and compassion. Continue teaching him about prayer. Continue praying with him and encouraging him. Continue praising his efforts and celebrating every step he takes towards Allah, however small it may seem. If he manages one prayer but struggles with another, encourage what he is able to do. If he finds standing difficult, allow him to pray seated. If the stillness of prayer is challenging, focus first upon helping him develop comfort and familiarity with ṣalāh rather than insisting upon an ideal performance. If wuḍūʾ remains a significant sensory challenge, continue working on it gradually and patiently without allowing it to become a source of daily conflict and distress.

At this stage, the objective is not perfection. The objective is attachment. A child who grows up loving prayer can continue refining his practice throughout his life. By contrast, a child who comes to associate prayer with pressure, conflict, anxiety, and repeated failure may carry those negative associations for many years. The preservation of his relationship with Allah and with worship is therefore of immense importance.

You mention the well-known narration concerning instructing children to pray at the age of seven and striking them at the age of ten if they do not pray. I have discussed elsewhere my view that the report relied upon in this regard is not established in a manner that justifies the widespread use sometimes made of it, and I would encourage you to read that discussion. Even setting aside questions concerning its authenticity, it is important to appreciate that the scholars never understood such texts as a licence for harshness, anger, humiliation, or conduct that causes genuine harm. The spirit of Islamic upbringing is one of wisdom, mercy, and consideration of individual circumstances.

In your son's case especially, I would strongly discourage any form of physical discipline connected to prayer. A child who experiences significant sensory and emotional challenges should not be treated as though his difficulties are merely matters of choice or unwillingness. The likely consequence of force in such circumstances is not the cultivation of devotion, but rather the creation of aversion and distress. Your son clearly loves Allah and desires His pleasure. That love is a precious trust. It should be nurtured carefully, not placed at risk through approaches that may overwhelm him.

It is also worth remembering that many children with autism and ADHD undergo significant development as they grow older. Difficulties that appear overwhelming at nine years of age may become considerably more manageable in adolescence or adulthood. It is therefore unwise to assume that his present challenges will necessarily remain unchanged. A patient and gradual approach often bears fruit over time in ways that are not immediately apparent.

As for the period after puberty, that matter will depend upon his actual condition and capabilities when the time arrives. The jurists have long recognised that legal obligation is tied to ability. Allah has not required from His servants what lies beyond their capacity. The Sacred Law contains numerous concessions for those facing illness, disability, hardship, or genuine impediments. A person who cannot stand may pray sitting. One who cannot perform certain actions performs what he is able to perform. Throughout the books of fiqh one finds the consistent application of the principle that obligation is measured according to capacity.

If, after reaching puberty, your son continues to experience significant sensory difficulties that affect aspects of purification or prayer, then those issues should be assessed in light of his specific circumstances and the relevant legal principles. It is neither necessary nor beneficial to attempt to resolve every future question now. The reality is that your son remains a child, and the task before you at present is not that of a muftī determining the obligations of an adult, but that of loving parents nurturing a young believer.

Continue teaching him who Allah is. Continue teaching him about the mercy, generosity, and beauty of his Lord. Continue teaching him about the Messenger of Allah ﷺ and helping him develop love for him. Continue cultivating his attachment to the Qur'an and to Islamic learning. Continue making prayer a place of comfort, belonging, and spiritual connection. Continue making abundant duʿāʾ for him, asking Allah to guide him, strengthen him, and make worship beloved to him.

From everything you have written, it appears that your son is already travelling in the right direction. He loves Allah, loves Islam, and wishes to please his Lord. These are among the greatest signs of goodness that a parent could hope to see in a child. Protect that goodness. Build upon it patiently. Trust that Allah, who created your son and knows his struggles better than anyone else, is more merciful to him than any of us could ever be.
May Allah Most High reward you for your care, grant your son ease in his difficulties, increase him in faith and guidance, and make him among His righteous and beloved servants.

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LIFE IS SHORT EVERY MOMENT HAPPY 😊

AND ALWAYS SMILES😁

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