This article was shared by a sister. A simple moment yet a powerful message!
Alone, but Not Empty
There was a time I sat in a crowded room and felt like a ghost.
Laughter echoed. Glasses clinked. People exchanged masha Allahs and life updates like a flurry of WhatsApp voice notes. And yet, I felt like I was wrapped in cling-wrap, visible, but untouched.
Ever been there? Where you smile politely but feel like a fraud? Where your soul’s screaming but your lips say, “I’m fine”?
That, my dear sister, was the beginning of my real journey back to Allah.
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Solitude: The Space Allah Fills
When I was at my lowest, the invitations stopped. The group chats turned silent. The affirmations I craved from friends, family, even community faded.
But strangely… that’s when I felt something new. Not loud. Not dramatic. Just a quiet, divine presence.
“And when My servants ask you concerning Me, indeed I am near…”
(Surah Al-Baqarah, 2:186)
Not we will come to you in a crowd. Not you will find Me through others. No. “I am near.”
That verse hit different when I was curled on the prayer mat at 3am, eyes swollen, with only Allah to hear me.
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The Gifts Hidden in Isolation
Loneliness, painful as it is, is not a punishment. It’s a divine appointment. Because when everyone else leaves, guess who’s left?
The One who:
Never missed a tear you wiped quietly at night.
Knew every moment you swallowed your words for peace.
Heard the dhikr buried under your breath while folding laundry.
Loneliness stripped me of distractions. It burned the illusion that I needed to be constantly surrounded to matter. It made space for the One who always waited for me to finally turn inward.
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Tazkiyah in Silence
Sometimes we think growing spiritually means joining classes, reciting long surahs, or wearing visibly “pious” armor. And yes — those are beautiful.
But you know what’s also ibadah?
Whispering Astaghfirullah while watching your life fall apart.
Breathing through panic and still saying Alhamdulillah.
Sitting alone at a cafeteria and not checking your phone, just saying, “Ya Allah… I’m still here.”
That is real tazkiyah. That’s purification through presence. No applause. Just proximity.
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When the World Feels Cold, He Is Warm
There are days I still feel isolated — like no one “gets” me. And in this fast-paced life, even your loneliness can feel like an inconvenience to others. Everyone’s busy. Nobody really listens.
But Allah? He listens without needing context.
He already knows the whole story. He knew your heartbreak before you could form the dua. He never needed the words. Only your turning.
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Final Reflection: Alone with Allah
If you’re reading this while sipping tea on your own, or lying in bed after everyone has logged off, this is for you:
Don’t run from your loneliness. Sit in it. Feel it. And then fill it — not with noise, but with dhikr, with tawbah, with your own words to your Rabb.
Because being alone doesn’t mean being abandoned.
Sometimes, it just means Allah cleared the room…
so it could be just you and Him.
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Have you experienced a moment of closeness to Allah in your solitude? Share your story with a sister. Or better yet — journal it. Your loneliness may just be someone else’s guiding light, too.
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