Every Muslim secretly has one fantasy.
No, not a bigger house.
Not a new job.
Not even meeting that dream spouse who can cook, communicate, and understand divine timing.
The real dream is this:
“Ya Allah, let me enter paradise without being questioned.”
Because let’s be honest.
If the angels ever ask, “Why did you do this?”
Most of us will say, “I can explain,” and then promptly forget everything we planned to explain.
But here’s the shocking twist:
Entering paradise without questioning is possible. Real. Authenticated. And it might be more achievable than we think.
Not easy.
But possible.
And the path?
It’s hilariously relatable.
The Constant Dua Marathon
There is something beautiful and chaotic about modern Muslim duas.
We ask for forgiveness.
We ask for guidance.
We ask for ease.
And then we also say:
“Ya Allah, help me find parking.”
“Ya Allah, let my meeting get cancelled.”
“Ya Allah, let my child sleep early tonight.”
Ridiculous, touching, and surprisingly spiritual.
The Prophet said:
“Nothing is more honourable to Allah than dua.”
Tirmidhi 3370
https://sunnah.com/tirmidhi:3370
That means this:
A Muslim who is always turning to Allah
→ is a Muslim Allah honours
→ and those whom Allah honours
→ are often spared humiliation on the Day of Judgment.
Even if your dua is messy, casual, desperate, or overly detailed, Allah loves the voice that keeps coming back.
This alone makes your reckoning lighter.
The Avoid Major Sins Olympics
Every day, Muslims compete in a silent spiritual Olympics:
Avoiding riba.
Avoiding zina.
Avoiding backbiting.
Avoiding destroying someone’s dignity.
And when we slip, the guilt hits like a spiritual punch to the chest.
The Prophet said:
“If you avoid the major sins, Allah will erase your minor ones.”
Muslim 88
https://sunnah.com/muslim:88
Avoiding the major sins reduces your judgment dramatically.
Avoiding them consistently?
That places you among the people whose scale becomes light, whose record becomes clean, and whose questioning becomes minimal.
Some may even join the honored group who enter paradise without any questioning at all.
The Fear of Hurting People
Hurting people is dangerous in Islam.
Very dangerous.
One insult.
One betrayal.
One careless comment.
One broken heart.
One bad intention.
All of these become debts to be repaid on Judgment Day.
The Prophet said:
The bankrupt person is the one who comes with prayers and fasting but has wronged others.
Muslim 2581
https://sunnah.com/muslim:2581
So when you hold your tongue, forgive quickly, and avoid causing pain even when you feel the urge to “give someone a lesson,” you are actually saving yourself from interrogation later.
Mercy today reduces questioning tomorrow.
Tahajjud: The Private Consultation
There is nothing like tahajjud.
It is emotional.
It is intimate.
It is quiet, trembling honesty.
Sometimes you wake up and just sit in silence for ten minutes, wondering why your life is like this.
Then you stand, pray two rakaat, and suddenly your heart spills everything:
“Ya Allah, I am tired.”
“Ya Allah, I am guilty.”
“Ya Allah, please do not humiliate me on Judgment Day.”
“Ya Allah, I genuinely want to be better.”
The Prophet said:
Allah descends in the last third of the night and asks:
‘Who is calling Me so I may answer him?’
Bukhari 1145
https://sunnah.com/bukhari:1145
Tahajjud is not a ritual.
It is a consultation.
It is where Allah protects, forgives, lifts and hides your flaws.
Those who pray tahajjud with sincerity often walk into the hereafter with a protected file.
Zikr, Selawat, Istighfar: The Heart Detergent
People who perform zikr and istighfar are basically polishing their souls daily.
Astaghfirullah removes spiritual stains.
Selawat increases divine favour.
Zikr builds inner strength.
The Prophet said:
“Whoever says Astaghfirullah frequently, Allah will grant him relief from every worry.”
Ibn Majah 3819
https://sunnah.com/ibnmajah:3819
Imagine entering the hereafter with a heart softened by constant remembrance.
Allah does not question hearts that stayed alive.
So… Can All This Help a Muslim Avoid Questioning?
Yes.
These practices do something profound:
They transform the heart.
They build sincerity.
They clean intentions.
They soften ego.
They purify weaknesses.
The seventy thousand who enter paradise without questioning are described as people with pure reliance on Allah and clean hearts.
Purified hearts are often spared interrogation.
And the modern Muslim who is:
Always making dua,
Avoiding major sins,
Careful not to hurt others,
Praying tahajjud sincerely,
Performing zikr daily,
Making selawat consistently,
Seeking forgiveness constantly…
…is far closer to that honored group than they think.
Not perfect.
Not sinless.
Not saintly.
But trying.
And Allah loves the people who keep trying.
Final Reflection
In an age of distraction, temptation, stress and noise, a Muslim who keeps fighting to stay sincere earns a special place in Allah’s sight.
You may feel average.
You may feel inconsistent.
You may feel flawed.
But the consistent struggler is often more beloved to Allah than the naturally righteous.
And the beloved ones are the ones He spares.
May we be among them.
More Read!
Why Our Relationship with Allah Feels Immature and How He commanded to Helps Us Grow
Little Secrets to Ignite Excitement in Your Life: A Playful Guide for Married Women

