There is a dangerous illusion quietly growing among us.
It does not look like sin.
It does not feel like rebellion.
In fact, it often feels like… righteousness.
That is exactly why it is dangerous.
We are no longer simply struggling with desires.
We are learning how to dress our desires in religious language and call it faith.
And that is where self deception begins.
When “Good” Feels Too Easy
We scroll for hours.
Islamic reminders. Short clips. A hadith here. A motivational quote there.
We feel productive. Spiritually fed. Almost proud.
But ask yourself honestly.
When you close the app, what remains?
Did it change you?
Did it slow you down?
Did it make you act differently?
Or did it simply give you the feeling that you did something good?
That feeling can be addictive.
Because it replaces real effort with emotional comfort.
The Subtle Trade We Are Making
We were taught to sacrifice our desires for the sake of Allah.
But today, something has flipped.
We are quietly sacrificing Allah’s commands to protect our desires.
Not openly. Not intentionally. But cleverly.
You are tired after work.
You need “me time”.
So you scroll. You rest. You disconnect.
Nothing wrong, right?
But that same tiredness never stops you from your phone.
Yet it stops you from:
- Reciting Quran for even 15 minutes
- Calling your parents just to check in
- Sitting with your children and just talking nonsense
Simple things. Small things. But heavy in the sight of Allah.
We did not reject these acts.
We just replaced them.
When Family Becomes Routine, Not Responsibility
You go out for dinner with your spouse and children.
It is normal. It is good.
But here is the uncomfortable question.
When was the last time you brought your parents along?
Or your siblings who live separately?
Or that uncle or aunt you have not spoken to in months?
Allah mentions maintaining ties of kinship repeatedly in the Quran, right after worship.
Not as a side note. As a command.
Yet we reduce it to occasional visits during festive seasons.
And we tell ourselves, “I am busy.”
Are we really busy?
Or are we just comfortable?
Religion That Comforts, Not Transforms
This is where self deception becomes dangerous.
We start using religion not to change ourselves, but to validate ourselves.
We listen to reminders that agree with us.
We follow content that makes us feel good.
We avoid anything that challenges us.
We say, “I learned something today.”
But nothing in our life changes.
No habits shift.
No relationships improve.
No ego is challenged.
So what exactly did we learn?
Knowledge that does not transform you can slowly become a tool of self deception.
Because now you think you are growing.
When in reality, you are standing still.
The Illusion of “I Am Doing Enough”
One of the most dangerous thoughts is this:
“I am okay. I am doing my part.”
That sentence can quietly block growth.
Because it shuts down self reflection.
You pray.
You watch Islamic content.
You avoid major sins.
So everything seems fine.
But what about the people around you?
Are you hurting someone with your words?
Neglecting someone who needs you?
Choosing comfort over responsibility?
And still thinking, “Allah will understand”?
That is not always faith.
Sometimes, that is self deception speaking on behalf of your desires.
A Thought That Should Sit With You
What if…
The biggest problem today is not that we are sinful.
But that we are convincing ourselves we are not?
What if we are not running away from religion…
But reshaping it to suit our lifestyle?
That is a much harder truth to face.
Sit With This Before You Move On
No checklist.
No action steps.
Just a pause.
Ask yourself quietly tonight:
What am I doing that looks like it is for Allah…
but is actually for myself?
And if you struggle to answer that…
That might already be your answer.
MORE READS!
- Muslim Who Wants To Escape Judgment Day Questioning
- Wellness Without Compromise – Halal‑Friendly Self‑Care for Muslimah Souls

