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🕋 Spirituality, hadiths, Islamic history and teachings. Connect with fellow members in enlightening conversations as we seek a deeper understanding and appreciation of Islam.
One thing I have noticed recently is that some people immediately assume that if you speak about Islam, share a verse from the Quran, mention a hadith, or remind others of something beneficial, then you must be a Sheikh. Why? Since when did learning and teaching become restricted to scholars alone? Of course, scholars have a special status, and we should respect those who dedicate their lives to seeking and teaching Islamic knowledge. But Islam was never meant to be locked away in books or classrooms. The Prophet Muhammad ﷺ said: “Convey from me, even if it is one verse.” He did not say only scholars should convey. He encouraged ordinary Muslims to learn and share what they know truthfully and responsibly. You do not need to be a Sheikh to remind someone to pray, to share a verse that touched your heart, or to encourage kindness, honesty, charity, patience, gratitude, and good character. Sometimes a single reminder changes a person’s life. Sometimes one verse arrives at exactly the right moment. Sometimes one sincere sentence becomes a source of guidance for years, and perhaps you never even know it.
One of the most beautiful things about Islam is that knowledge is meant to travel. From parent to child. From teacher to student. From friend to friend. From generation to generation. Imagine if every Muslim learned one beneficial thing and taught it to one other person. How much goodness would spread? How many hasanat would continue long after we are gone? I am not writing this because I am a scholar, and I am certainly not writing it because I think I know everything. I write because I care. I have spent years reading, observing, learning from life, business, relationships, successes, failures, books, and people. If I learn something beneficial, I believe it should be passed on. Knowledge is one of the few things that grows when it is given away.
And to every brother and sister reading this, please allow me one honest piece of advice. Do not fake your intentions. Do not pretend to be seeking what you are not actually seeking. Do not present a version of yourself that does not exist. Do not use religion, emotions, attention, or people’s hopes as a game. Whether it is on a marriage platform, social media, in business, or in daily life, sincerity matters. If your intentions are not aligned with the purpose of what you are doing, be honest about it. Sooner or later, masks fall. The truth has a strange way of revealing itself, and when it does, it rarely affects only one person. It affects trust, families, futures, and hearts. Life has a way of returning our actions to us. Perhaps not immediately. Perhaps not in the way we expect. But eventually. This is why sincerity is not only an Islamic virtue; it is protection. Protection for you, protection for others, and protection for everyone connected to both of you.
My view is simple: Learn. Verify. Practice. Then teach what you know with humility. Not to show knowledge. Not to win arguments. Not to appear religious. But because you want good for others and because you hope Allah will use you as a means of benefit. You do not need to know everything to teach something. You simply need to be honest about what you know and humble about what you do not know. Perhaps one day a word you share will help someone pray, repent, become a better parent, spouse, friend, or Muslim. And perhaps that good deed will continue benefiting you long after your name is forgotten. May Allah make us among those who learn beneficial knowledge, act upon it, teach it sincerely, and leave behind goodness that continues after our death. May He purify our intentions, make our words truthful, our actions sincere, and our hearts attached to Him alone.
اللهم علمنا ما ينفعنا، وانفعنا بما علمتنا، وزدنا علمًا وحكمةً وإخلاصًا، واجعلنا مفاتيح للخير مغاليق للشر، ووفقنا لنشر العلم النافع والذكر الحسن، وطهر نياتنا من الرياء والخداع، واجعل أعمالنا خالصة لوجهك الكريم، واحفظنا من أن نظلم أو نُظلم، أو نخدع أو نُخدع، واجعل ما نتعلمه وما نعلمه شاهدًا لنا لا علينا يوم نلقاك.
آمين.
From Abdullah ibn Umar (R.A), the Messenger of Allah (ﷺ) said: "When the food of one of you is served, and the prayer is called, then start with eating. And let him not rush to leave the food until he finishes it."
📚 Bukhari and Muslim
Lesson: Islam balances worship and worldly needs. If food is in front of you and prayer starts, eat first so you don’t pray while distracted/hungry. Then pray with khushu’. But don’t rush eating either - eat calmly until you’re satisfied.
People who are crazy over celebrities whether actors, actresses, singers, sports personalities and these days k-pop idol are a huge red turn off for I am not 100% sure what about it is so repulsive but I have always found people in celebrity worship culture to be weird. Literally feels like Idol worshiping to me
It took me 10 years to understand the wisdom behind having good manners:
People will accept your advise
You will have support always
You get good deeds even after death
People will gravitate to the source of whats making you have good manners aka islam
Even your enemies will respect you
The Coded Reality (Part 2): Tuning Into the Divine Frequency 🌌📡
By Dr Muhammad
In Part 1, I gave you the hard scientific data: your physical senses are a biological prison, blinding you to 99.9965% of the electromagnetic reality actively vibrating around you right now. But as a doctor and a believer, this leaves me with a much deeper question. If our physical brains are locked in a dark skull, hardwired to filter out the unseen, how do we actually bridge the gap? How do we interface with what Islam calls the Divine Frequency?
Let’s step past the textbook theories. I want to show you the raw facts where quantum mechanics, neurobiology, and divine revelation collide.
Fact 1:
Your Heart is a Transmitter, Not Just a Pump
For decades, modern medicine treated the brain as the undisputed master of the human body. But neurocardiology has completely upended that. We now know the human heart possesses its own intrinsic nervous system a "little brain" containing over 40,000 specialized neurons.
Look at the physics of this: the heart generates the single strongest electromagnetic field in the entire human body. It is up to 60 times stronger electrically, and up to 5,000 times stronger magnetically, than the field produced by your brain. It doesn't just sit in your chest; its signal broadcasts several feet outside your physical body.
This is exactly why, in Islamic psychology, the cognitive center of a human being is not the skull; it is the Qalb (Heart). When Allah says in the Qur'an: ".They have hearts with which they do not undarstand..." (Surah Al-A'raf, 7:179), He is revealing a profound structural truth. Your brain is merely a computer processing worldly data, but your spiritual heart is a powerhouse built to transmit and receive the highest cosmic signals.
Fact 2:
The Science of Sakina (Heart-Brain Coherence)
When you live in a state of constant stress, anger, or addiction to the material distractions of this Dunya, your heart rhythms become jagged, chaotic, and fractured. This chaotic signal travels straight up your vagus nerve, hijacking your brain, locking you into frantic Beta waves, and cutting off your higher intellect. You are literally living out of sync.
But watch what happens when you step onto the prayer mat, completely cut out the noise, and enter a state of true Khushu (profound humility) and Dhikr (remembrance).
A physiological phenomenon called Heart-Brain Coherence takes over. Your heart’s electromagnetic rhythm shifts into a smooth, harmonious, perfect wave.
In physics, when two oscillating systems lock into the exact same frequency, it is called resonance. It eliminates internal static and maximizes energy efficiency.
This physiological synchronization is the precise physical manifestation of Sakina (Divine Tranquility). Allah reveals: "Verily, in the remembrance of Allah do hearts find rest." (Surah Ar-Ra'd, 13:28). By anchoring your heart on the remembrance of your Creator, you stabilize your body’s entire electromagnetic field, creating a clean, unbendable receptor for divine guidance.
Fact 3:
Calibrating the Quantum Cavity
In quantum mechanics, the law of Resonant Cavity Physics dictates a strict rule: a receiver must be perfectly calibrated to the exact volume and dimensions of an incoming wave to capture it. If there is even a micro-millimeter of distortion or rust, the signal passes right through unnoticed.
When your heart is weighed down by the rust (Raan) of ego, pride, and constant digital consumption, its frequency distorts. The divine signals Ilham (pious intuition) and Basirah (spiritual insight) are actively broadcasting around you, but they pass right through you because your internal receiver is completely misaligned.
My Final Reflection
The Divine Frequency is not an abstract, poetic metaphor. It is the ultimate reality of existence. When you pray with absolute presence, when you purify your intentions, you are performing a precision engineering calibration on your own body and soul.
You are slowing down your neural currents, aligning your heart’s massive electromagnetic field with your brain, and stepping into perfect coherence with the divine decree (Qadr). You stop living on the chaotic, superficial frequencies of human opinion and immediate desires. Instead, you tune into the eternal broadcast of peace, clarity, and truth that flows directly from Al-Khaliq.
As an author and a practitioner, my advice to you is simple: stop trying to find the truth by analyzing the chaotic noise of the world. Clean your receiver, silence the mind, and let your heart tune into the frequency it was originally engineered to follow. 🕊️💫
Are you ready to clear the static and let your heart finally align?
Allah Hafiz
The Coded Reality: The Invisible Frequencies Your Brain is Programmed to Reject 🧠⚡
By Dr Muhammad
Right now, as you read this, you are sitting in a blazing ocean of invisible data. Millions of cellular streams, satellite frequencies, radio waves, and geomagnetic fields are passing straight through your skull. They are mathematically, physically real,yet you perceive absolute silence.
Modern physics and neurobiology deliver a stunning, humbling truth:
Human beings are functionally blind. Our physical eyes can only detect a microscopic sliver of the electromagnetic spectrum,less than 0.0035% of what actually exists.
The remaining 99.9965% of physical reality is completely hidden from us. Your brain sits locked in a dark, silent fortress of bone, relying on your eyes and ears to act as biological filters. If your brain suddenly dropped this shield and picked up every hidden signal vibrating around you right now, the sheer volume of energy would cause instant, catastrophic sensory overload. Your mind would shatter.
This biological filter is not an evolutionary accident. It is the physical architecture of what Islam calls the Hejab (The Veil).
Allah explicitly states in the Qur'an that this restriction is temporary and entirely deliberate:
"We have removed your veil from you, and your sight this Day is sharp." (Surah Qaf, 50:22)
This means the realm of Al-Ghaib (The Unseen). the angels created from pure light-energy, the spiritual dimensions, the praise of the creation is not located in a distant galaxy. It is right here, occupying the vast, invisible territory that our biology is hardwired to reject.
So how do we access the Truth?
When the physical body slows down, the ultimate bridge opens. In quantum mechanics, we learn about Quantum Entanglement,the truth that two particles can be instantly synchronized across vast distances, completely bypassing physical barriers.
In Islam, this is the reality of Du'a and Khushu (deep focus).
When you step onto the prayer mat and cut out the static of the Dunya, your brainwaves undergo a dramatic shift. They plunge from frantic, ego-driven Beta waves into the deeply synchronized, calm frequencies of Alpha and Theta waves.
By dropping your brain's electrical frequency, you effectively turn off the machine of the Dunya.
You clear the biological noise.
Suddenly, your spiritual receiver the Qalb (Heart)takes over. It begins to pick up the hidden signals that the physical skull blocks out: profound divine tranquility (Sakina), sharp, unexplainable intuition (Ilham), and a piercing spiritual insight (Basirah).
Science proves that our physical senses lie to us by omission, hiding 99% of the universe. Islam commands us to wake up to the Truth. You were not created to be a slave to the 0.0035% you can see. Clean your heart, slow down your mind, and tune into the divine broadcast that is constantly calling you home. 🕊️🛰️
Are you relying on your physical eyes to find the truth, or have you started listening with your heart?
Allah Hafiz
Normalise saying “Allah provided me” instead of “I manifested this”. The universe has no will of its own. Allah does. ✨🤲🏼💛
If you don’t understand your brother’s intention, ask for clarification, and don’t let Shaytan interpret it for you.
Misunderstandings often arise not from what is said, but from what is assumed. Before allowing doubts to grow, seek clarity.
A simple question can prevent broken ties, and an open heart can silence Shaytan’s whispers. Strengthen your relationships through sincere communication, not assumptions.
The Prophet ﷺ said:
إِيَّاكُمْ وَالظَّنَّ؛ فَإِنَّ الظَّنَّ أَكْذَبُ الْحَدِيثِ
"Beware of suspicion, for suspicion is the most false of speech..." (Bukhari: 6724).
The Messenger of Allah (ﷺ) said: "All of my Ummah will be forgiven except those who commit mujaharah. And from mujaharah is that a person commits a sin at night, then in the morning Allah covers it for him, but he says: O so-and-so, last night I did such-and-such. He spent the night with Allah covering him, but in the morning he exposes what Allah had concealed for him."
📚 Bukhari and Muslim
O Allah! Cover our faults in this world and the Hereafter, grant us a good ending, place us among Your righteous servants, and erase all our sins and the sins of those who came before us. For the sake of the Prophet of Mercy.