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Blessings We Cannot See

 

 

یہ مضمون اردو میں پڑھیں

We usually recognize blessings when they arrive wrapped in joy: a healthy child, a steady income, a trusted friend. But when blessings come disguised—as delay, loss, or disappointment—we often mistake them for punishment or neglect. Faith encourages us to broaden our perspective: what appears as deprivation today may, in fact, be purification, redirection, or protection tomorrow. These are blessings we cannot see—yet.

When Blessings Are Hidden

Life presents countless moments that feel like setbacks: an illness that weakens the body, a rejection that bruises confidence, or a door slammed shut on a cherished dream. At first glance, they seem only negative. Yet often, with time, we realize they contain a wisdom invisible in the moment.

The Qur’an anchors this insight:

“It may be that you dislike a thing while it is good for you, and it may be that you like a thing while it is bad for you. God knows, and you do not know.” (Al-Baqarah 2:216)

In Proverbs 3:5-6, the same message is given in the words:

“Trust in the Lord with all your heart
and do not lean on your own understanding.”

These and similar verses remind us that our perspective is limited. What seems like loss now may ultimately be what ensures our long-term well-being.

Pain as a Hidden Blessing

Pain itself can serve as a purifier. A minor illness can wash away sins. A greater trial can remove arrogance, teaching humility and empathy that comfort never could.

The Prophet ﷺ said:

“No fatigue, nor disease, nor sorrow, nor sadness, nor hurt, nor distress befalls a Muslim, even if it were the prick he receives from a thorn, but that God expiates some of his sins for that.” (Bukhari, Muslim)

This hadith does not mean pain automatically earns reward. Rather, it is the believer’s response—patience, gratitude, and trust—that transforms the thorn into forgiveness and the hardship into elevation.

Example: Someone with chronic back pain may initially resent their condition. Yet, as they learn to cope, they also develop deeper compassion for others who suffer, a sharper sense of life’s fragility, and a stronger reliance on God. The pain becomes a hidden school of character.

Delayed Blessings: God’s Timing, Not Ours

Sometimes the blessing is not denied, only delayed. What seems like God’s silence is often His mercy holding back.

A man desperately sought a job abroad, convinced it would fix his family’s financial problems. His visa was denied. Years later, his homeland experienced a sudden economic surge, and he built a stable business while staying close to his aging parents. What seemed like bad luck was actually a blessing—guiding him to where he was most needed.

Faith encourages us to believe that a delayed outcome today might be setting the stage for a better one tomorrow—or even for eternal goodness in the Hereafter.

Treaty of Hudaybiyyah

The Treaty of Hudaybiyyah looked like a humiliation to many companions. The Muslims were denied entry to Mecca, and the terms seemed unfair. Some companions, including Umar ibn al-Khattab (RA), found it hard to accept. However, the Qur’an revealed that this “loss” was actually a clear victory (48:1). The treaty not only paved the way for peaceful propagation, leading to Islam’s expansion far beyond what a single battle could have achieved, but also protected those people of Mecca who had accepted Islam but could not declare their conversion out of fear of persecution by their leaders.

What seemed like a setback in the short term turned into a victory in the long run. Hudaybiyyah stands as a timeless reminder that blessings often come disguised in hardship.

Training the Eye of Faith

The difference between despair and hope is in how we train our eyes. Do we only recognize something as a blessing when it feels good? Or can we trust God’s wisdom even when we cannot yet see the benefit?

Practical Tip: Keep a “hidden blessings journal.” When something painful happens, write it down. Later, revisit those notes to discover what wisdom or opportunity eventually surfaced. Over time, this habit rewires the mind to expect hidden mercy, even during the darkest moments.

A Practical Example

A student worked tirelessly for a prestigious scholarship but did not succeed in the final round. For months, she felt disappointed. Years later, she found herself excelling in a different area, helping communities in ways the scholarship route would never have allowed. Looking back, she saw that the rejection was really redirection—a blessing she could not see at the time.

Reflection

  • Recall a disappointment from your past that later turned out to be a hidden blessing. Write about what you felt then, what you learned later, and how it reshaped your trust in God.
  • Identify one current difficulty. Now, describe it as if it is a hidden blessing waiting for the right moment. How does this change in narration influence your feelings and response?

Closing Note

Faith does not deny the pain of loss or disappointment. But it whispers a deeper truth: the story is not over when our eyes see only suffering. Some blessings come instantly, others are delayed, and some are reserved entirely for the Hereafter. Trusting in God’s wisdom means believing that even unseen blessings are real—and that one day, in this world or the next, their purpose will be revealed.

Gratitude Before the Loss

 

 

Most of us only recognize blessings after they are gone. A sudden illness reminds us of the gift of health. The passing of a loved one exposes the depth of their presence in our lives. Even a small disruption in our daily routine makes us realize how much ease we had been enjoying unnoticed. Yet faith calls us to something higher: to practice gratitude before the loss, not only after it.

The Blindness of Familiarity

Human beings adapt quickly. Breathing, walking, eating, seeing, the presence of family—these become “normal,” and familiarity breeds neglect. Neglect erodes gratitude. We only recognize the extraordinary nature of these gifts when one of them is disrupted.

The Shock of Loss as Reminder

When blessings are lost, even briefly, their value becomes strikingly clear. A headache makes us aware of the blessing of a clear head. A strained relationship reminds us of the comfort of harmony. These shocks can serve as gentle reminders: if deprivation feels so painful, how rich we must have been before.

Gratitude as Conscious Awareness

True gratitude is not mere words; it begins with awareness. The Qur’an reminds:

“And if you count God’s favors, you will never be able to number them.” (Ibrahim 14:34).

Counting here means to notice, reflect, and acknowledge what we often overlook. Gratitude is an act of conscious seeing.

The Discipline of Daily Thankfulness

We can train ourselves to notice blessings before they are lost by:

  • Pausing daily to reflect on three “ordinary” gifts we usually ignore.
  • Thanking God for each, as if we had just regained it after losing it.
  • Remembering that every blessing is fragile and temporary.

This practice creates what can be called “grateful imagination” — a mindset that treats the present as a gift, not as something owed.

Gratitude as Strength and Healing

Gratitude is not only spiritually uplifting; it is also strengthening. Modern research affirms that gratitude improves mood, resilience, and even physical health. Spiritually, it aligns us with God’s mercy. The Prophet ﷺ taught:

“Look at those who are below you and do not look at those who are above you, lest you belittle the favors of God upon you.” (Muslim).

Choosing Gratitude Beforehand

If we wait for loss to recognize blessings, gratitude becomes reactive. But when we learn to notice and thank God beforehand, gratitude becomes proactive—a deliberate act of worship. It then flows not from pain, but from choice. And chosen gratitude protects the heart from despair when loss inevitably arrives.

 

Reflection: Gratitude in Advance

Tonight, before you sleep:

  • Identify three ordinary blessings in your life that you rarely notice (e.g., your eyesight, your ability to breathe with ease, the presence of a loved one).
  • Imagine, just for a moment, what life would be like without each of them.
  • Now thank God for these blessings as if they had just been returned to you after being lost.

This small exercise trains the heart to live in gratitude before loss, so that when loss does come—as it must in this transient world—gratitude is already deeply rooted.

 

 

یہ مضمون اردو میں پڑھیں

Most people see fear as something negative — a burden to escape, a weakness to overcome. Yet, fear also contains a hidden gift: it reveals blessings we might never have noticed. We can only fear losing something if we genuinely value it. Often, we only realize how precious a gift is when the possibility of losing it confronts us. In this way, fear is not just an enemy to fight but a teacher guiding us toward gratitude and humility.

Fear Exposes What We Value

We do not fear losing what has no meaning to us. We only fear losing what truly matters—health, safety, loved ones, livelihood, dignity. The strength of our fear reveals how much we value these things. The problem is that we’ve lived with these blessings for so long that we no longer see them as blessings.

  • The fear of illness serves as a reminder that we have enjoyed good health.
  • The fear of poverty highlights the stability we often ignore.
  • The fear of conflict exposes the peace we once took for granted.

Key Insight: Fear reveals the hidden gratitude we tend to forget to feel.

From Taking for Granted to Thankfulness

Many blessings quietly exist in our daily lives. We walk, see, sleep safely, share meals with family — without intentionally expressing gratitude. Only when faced with loss do we suddenly realize: This mattered to me all along.

Exercise: Next time you feel fear, pause and complete this sentence:

I fear losing ___, which means I value ___, and I now realize I am grateful for ___.

This changes fear from a paralyzing emotion into a pathway for gratitude.

Fear Teaches Humility

Fear not only points us to blessings — it also reminds us how fragile those blessings are in our hands. We cannot ultimately safeguard our health from illness, our wealth from loss, or our relationships from change. Fear reveals the illusion of control and forces us to face reality: what we have is never completely secure.

This realization is humbling. It shifts our mindset from entitlement (“this is mine, I deserve it, I can keep it safe”) to gift (“this was given to me, and I cannot guarantee it will remain”. True humility comes from recognizing that life is not under our control but entrusted to us for a while.

Reflection Prompt: When fear arises, attempt to transform it into a prayer.

This fear shows me how much I value this gift. Thank you, God, for granting it. Help me to use it wisely while it lasts, and give me strength if it leaves.

Fear as Preparation

Gratitude during good times prepares the heart for difficult times. When fears become reality — when health weakens, wealth decreases, or relationships shift — a grateful and humble heart remains steadier and less shaken. Fear then acts as practice: it teaches us to hold loosely what we cannot control while deepening our trust in God.

Practice: Before bed, recall one fear that crossed your mind during the day. Ask:

  1. What blessing did this fear reveal?
  2. How much control do I genuinely have over protecting it?
  3. How can I transform this realization into gratitude and humility?

Final Reflection

Fear and gratitude are intertwined: fear reveals what we value, gratitude turns that realization into peace, and humility stabilizes both by reminding us of our lack of control. When we take blessings for granted, fear jolts us awake. It whispers: “You cared about this all along — don’t wait until it’s gone to give thanks.”

The next time fear surfaces, let it guide you not into panic but into awareness. Behind every fear is a hidden blessing, a lesson in humility, and an invitation to gratitude.