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Bidding farewell

It came, and within a blink of an eye its gone again.

 

Every year we anticipate its arrival. We prepare the house, the kitchen, our work schedules, or alarm clocks, our lists. Each year we eagerly await its knock on our door to whole- heartedly welcome it back into our lives. But just as we greeted this beautiful friend at the beginning of the month, today Ramadan bids us farewell for another whole year. As we reluctantly watch it leave like that beloved friend you don’t want to say good bye to, we try and cherish each moment it spent with us. Holding on to its memories before they fade. Saddened that this special friend cannot stay with us longer. Heartbroken that we must bid it farewell.

During our beloved friend’s stay, Satan is locked away somewhere in the deepest pits of hell. For thirty days we deprive our bodies, so that we can nourish our souls. Amidst the tranquility that Ramadan brings, it coaches us to busy ourselves with acts pleasing to our Creator. An air of peace, love and joy surrounds us each day as Ramadan re-trains us what we had forgotten throughout the year. And just when we start to get to the hang of things again, it bids us farewell.

It’s a bittersweet feeling. Glad to have experience it once again, sad to see it leave soon. Unsure if I’ll ever meet it again. Wish I could have done more while it was here. Grateful for what it taught me.

“Ramadan is not temporary increase of religious practice, its is a glimpse of what you are capable of doing everyday”

A few of the many things I learned from our blessed friend, Ramadan:

 “One should starve his soul everyday like its Ramadan. Starve it of desires, temptations, bad deeds, backbiting, fighting. Just like we look out all day to breaking our fast, the same way we should look out to meeting Allah- The Greatest. For life is but a fasting day, starve your soul and prepare yourself all day for that moment you meet God. That moment your fasting is over.” – Mawwada.

I think the most important thing I took away from Ramadan is that everything we do in these thirty days, we are more than capable of doing throughout the year. Yes, everyone has a different situation, different circumstances. Some might “achieve” more this month than others, some less than they had hoped. This will vary for each and every one differently. But clearly Ramadan teaches us our potentials. They say it takes twenty-one days to form a habit, Allah (swt) blesses us with thirty.  More importantly Ramadan should not come as a shock to our daily lives. What we can achieve in Ramadan is easily achievable throughout the year and beyond. The best that we are in Ramadan can and should continue throughout our lives. If we are willing to work hard in Ramadan why not sustain this as best as we can for the rest of our lifetime. If we carry on this way, maybe our ending to life will be just as sweet as Eid is at the end of Ramadan.

So let us not disrespect this dear friend. Let us not waste what it blessed us to become, by returning to our old ways and habits as soon we break the last fast of Ramadan. Let us consistently practice what we have learned, throughout the year, so that when it returns again next year, انشاالله , we are better than where we started.

Until then, good-bye dear friend.

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