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Process Over Results

 

 

یہ مضمون اردو میں پڑھیں

In nearly every area of life—whether it’s education, parenting, relationships, or even religious practice—we often fall into a results-focused mindset. We concentrate on outcomes: Did my child do well? Did the student understand the lesson? Did I receive a reward from God? However, life continually reminds us that although results matter, they are never entirely within our control. What we can control is the process.

This shift in perspective—from results to process—is both a practical and a deeply spiritual principle.

The Farmer’s Lesson

Imagine a farmer who plants his crops. He tills the soil, waters the field, and makes sure every step is done properly. But when hailstorms hit and destroy the crop, the farmer doesn’t curse the heavens or give up farming. He goes back to the same process—plowing, sowing, watering—because he knows this is the part he can control. The harvest, whether plentiful or ruined, is never completely in his hands.

Human beings are no different. Like the farmer, we can only work faithfully through the process, never guaranteeing the outcome.

The Child Learning to Speak

Parents often worry when their child is slow to talk. However, language development is a natural process. If the child is placed in the right environment where language is spoken, they will eventually start talking—unless there is a medical issue. Pressuring, comparing, or punishing will not speed up this process; it might even cause harm.

This illustrates the broader principle: development happens through exposure, modeling, and environment, not through force or obsession with results.

Process Orientation in Parenting and Teaching

Imagine a parent trying to teach a child generosity at the dinner table. A results-driven approach might scold the child: “You should share right now!” But a process-driven parent will demonstrate generosity, share stories of role models, and foster a culture of sharing over time. In the end, the child’s heart will lean toward sacrifice—not because of fear of correction, but because of the natural internalization of values.

Similarly, when teaching fasting (roza), parents may fall into the trap of using reward and punishment: “If you fast, you’ll get this gift; if you don’t, you’ll lose this privilege.” This approach might work temporarily, but once the external motivation fades, so will the practice. The real process is in cultivating faith, conviction, and a relationship with God, so that fasting naturally becomes an act of devotion rather than merely an obligation.

Why Result-Orientation Fails

  • It creates pressure and judgment. Parents, teachers, or religious guides often resort to scolding, labeling, or forcing because they seek immediate results.
  • It fosters hypocrisy. People act for appearances or rewards, not out of conviction.
  • It collapses when external control is taken away. When pressure or authority is removed, the behavior disappears.

This is evident across society: we impose bans, punishments, and external restrictions, but seldom focus on developing inner will, faith, and self-control.

The Civic Sense Example

One notable observation from Hajj is the lack of civic sense among pilgrims. Many perform rituals outwardly but fail to demonstrate patience, order, or consideration for others. Why? Because their religious practice is viewed through a results-oriented lens—praying for rewards or fearing punishment—rather than through a process-oriented lens of gratitude, discipline, and service to God.

Process Orientation in Self-Development

This principle applies not only to parenting or society but also to ourselves.

  • If I wake up early, stay disciplined, and put effort into my business, I may or may not become wealthy—but I will definitely develop resilience and good habits.
  • If I study sincerely, I might or might not top the exam, but I will definitely become more knowledgeable.
  • If I practice patience in small daily tests, I may or may not change others—but I will transform my own character.

As the saying goes: “Don’t control what you cannot control. Control what you can—and that is your process.”

A Personal Anecdote

A student once told his mentor, “I study hard but still don’t get the top marks.” The mentor responded, “Your responsibility is not the top marks. Your responsibility is to learn with sincerity, honesty, and consistency. Marks belong to the system, effort belongs to you. Don’t confuse the two.”

That advice stayed with him for a lifetime—not just for school but for every challenge.

Reflections for Our Lives

  1. Am I obsessed with results? Do I judge myself or others solely based on visible outcomes?
  2. Am I faithful to the process? Do I stay committed to what is in my control, even when results are delayed or unseen?
  3. Am I fostering conviction or simply enforcing compliance?

Conclusion

Process orientation doesn’t mean ignoring results. It means letting go of the illusion of control over outcomes while putting our best effort into the actions, attitudes, and environments we can influence. It means trusting that in time, results will appear—some sooner, some later, and some possibly never in the way we expect.

In religion, parenting, relationships, and personal growth, this principle protects us from despair, arrogance, and judgment. It keeps us grounded in humility, patience, and trust in God.

As the farmer teaches us, hail may ruin the crop today, but tomorrow the soil still encourages us to plant again.

Reflection Prompt

Think of an area in your life where you’re frustrated by not seeing results. How would it change if you focused on the process instead of the outcome? What steps in the process are within your control today?

Three Steps to Faith-Based Responses - 5

 

 

 

Read the First part

Read the previous part

یہ مضمون اردو میں پڑھیں

Step 3: Action — Walking What the Heart Has Chosen

The third evening, he sat waiting as though he already knew the questions in my soul.

“Welcome,” he said warmly. “Awareness teaches you to see. Alignment teaches you to choose. Now comes the final test — how to live what you know.”

He leaned forward, voice gentle but clear.

“In the end, character is not just in your thoughts — it is in your actions.”

I swallowed. This felt weightier than anything before.

A Choice Is Only Real When You Walk It

“Many people,” he said, “know the right thing. They even intend it. They feel good about it inside.” Then he paused. “But character is not just made of good intentions. Character manifests when those intentions become footsteps.

He tapped his chest lightly and said, “Faith is not merely understood — it is practiced.”

Why Action Is Harder Than Awareness

He smiled sadly, as if speaking from experience. “Awareness humbles you. Alignment inspires you. But action — action exposes you. It reveals whether your commitment is real…

or only emotional.”

Then he whispered:

“Everyone loves principles, until they ask for their price.”

The Three Blocks to Action

He raised three fingers. “Most people fail here because of:”

  • Confusion: ‘Am I really sure this is the right thing?’ If so, return to awareness and alignment.
  • Consideration for others’ emotional state: “Some truths must be timed, softened, or delayed.” Wisdom is not cowardice — it is mercy.
  • Fear of outcomes: ‘What if they get upset? What if I lose this opportunity? What if it backfires?’

He looked straight into my eyes and said, “Action is chosen by principle, not by prediction. Outcomes are God’s. Honesty in effort is yours.”

When Action Feels Heavy

“Sometimes,” he continued, “you will know exactly what is right. You will have clarity. You will feel truth in your bones. And yet…” he paused, letting silence finish the sentence. “You will hesitate.”

“Why?” I asked softly.

He answered like someone who had wrestled such moments himself:

“Because the ego has its own loyalties.”

“To comfort. To give an impression. To get approval. To not upset the world.” He chuckled gently. “The ego would rather betray God than feel discomfort.”

Hidden Commitments

Then he explained something I had never heard before: “Sometimes you think you lack willpower. You don’t. You have other commitments stored deep inside — unspoken, unquestioned. For example:”

  • ‘I must appear competent.’
  • ‘I must always be liked.’
  • ‘I must never disappoint anyone.’
  • ‘I must protect my reputation.’

“These are subconscious vows. You made them long ago. And now they compete with your values.”

He tapped the table: “Every time you hesitate to do what is right, a hidden commitment is sitting in the driver’s seat.”

How to Break the Inner Resistance

“Write down your fear before acting,” he instructed.

  • ‘If I speak, he may dislike me.’
  • ‘If I stay firm, I may lose favor.’
  • ‘If I admit ignorance, I may look weak.’

Then ask:

‘Am I loyal to my ego — or my Lord?’

Silence.
Sharp.
Purifying.

The Freedom on the Other Side

He relaxed his posture suddenly, smiling. “When you finally act from principle, not fear, you feel it. A strange lightness. A quiet strength. A dignity that settles in your spine.”

He raised his hands outward:

“You become someone who belongs to God, not to people. And that,” he said, “is freedom.”

The Inner Jihad

“Do not imagine this step comes once,” he cautioned. “You will meet it again and again. Every act of truth, every moment of restraint, every sincere apology, every principled ‘no’ — each is a battle and a birth.”

He breathed deeply: “Jihad-un-nafs is not dramatic. It is silent, repetitive, sacred.”

A Simple Practice

“When the moment to act arrives,” he said, “ask:”

  • Am I acting from clarity or agitation?
  • Am I delaying courage?
  • Will I regret silence or regret the truth more?
  • If God wrote this in my record, am I content?

“And then,” he leaned back, “Do the right thing — even if your voice trembles and your ego resists.”

A Gentle Ending

He stood slowly, like someone closing a gate with care. “Awareness opened your eyes.

Alignment opened your heart. Action opens your destiny. The pause gives birth to clarity. Clarity gives birth to choice. Choice gives birth to character.”

He smiled as though blessing the journey:

“Now walk what you know.”

He took a step back. “Tonight,” he said softly, “let these truths settle with a prayer that we find the strength to live them from here on in our lives.”

I left quietly, feeling the weight of every moment where I chose silence, comfort, leaving an impression, or fear over truth — and the hope that next time, I will choose better.

One conscious breath.
One principled step.
Until faith becomes my movement, not just my intention.

 

یہ مضمون اردو میں پڑھیں

Across cultures, religions, and philosophies, certain values consistently emerge as universal principles—truthfulness, respect, patience, compassion, tolerance, and justice. They are timeless, deeply human, and recognized by everyone’s conscience. But simply acknowledging these values is not enough. The real challenge is in living them consistently, especially when personal desires, ego, or fear stand in the way.

To embody universal principles in daily life, two qualities are essential: humility and courage. These qualities are not only complementary but also fundamental. Without them, the loftiest principles remain aspirational ideals rather than actual lived experiences.

Why Humility Comes First

Humility means recognizing that my principles take priority over my personal ego. If honesty is my principle, then admitting I was wrong doesn’t damage my self-respect —in fact, it enhances it. If compassion is my principle, then my convenience shouldn’t come before someone else’s needs.

The Qur’an emphasizes this inward stance:

“The doors of the heavens will not be opened for those who rejected Our verses and arrogantly ignored them. They will not enter paradise until a camel passes through the eye of a needle[1]. That is how We punish such criminals.” (Al-A’raf 7:40)

Humility, then, is not a sign of weakness. It is the strength to admit that truth and virtue always transcend my ego.

Example: A parent realizes they scolded their child unfairly. The ego resists admitting fault—“How can I apologize to a child?” But humility transforms the situation: by admitting the mistake, the parent models honesty and respect, and, as a bonus, strengthens the bond of trust.

Why Courage is Essential

If humility surrenders the ego before principles, courage enables a person to act on those principles even when it costs them something. Aristotle, in his Nicomachean Ethics, described courage as the middle ground between cowardice and recklessness: not the absence of fear, but the resolve to act rightly despite fear.

The Qur’an praises this resolve:

“Those whom people cautioned, “The people [of Mecca] have gathered a great force against you; fear them,” but this [information] only increased their faith, and they replied, “God is sufficient for us. He is the best guardian.” (Āl ʿImrān 3:173)

Example: An employee who discovers corruption in their organization is aware of the risks of speaking up—loss of position, hostility, or isolation. But courage rooted in principle drives them to act anyway, believing that integrity is worth more than temporary security.

The Interplay of Humility and Courage

Humility without courage can result in passive virtue—knowing what is right but lacking the boldness to act on it. Courage without humility can turn into arrogance—using boldness to impose the self rather than uphold principles.

Together, they form a balanced character:

  • Humility keeps me small before truth.
  • Courage keeps me strong against falsehood.

This is why thinkers like C.S. Lewis argued that humility is not thinking less of oneself, but thinking of oneself less—while courage, he said, is “not simply one of the virtues, but the form of every virtue at the testing point.”

Universal Principles in Practice

Research in moral psychology (e.g., Jonathan Haidt’s work on The Righteous Mind) shows that across civilizations, humans converge on similar moral foundations: fairness, care, respect, loyalty, and sanctity. Religions universalize them, and secular ethics affirms them. However, living by them daily requires the twin guardians of humility and courage.

  • Respect: Humility to treat others with dignity; courage to show respect even when mocked or belittled.
  • Patience: Humility to accept limits of control; courage to endure hardship without bitterness.
  • Compassion: Humility to feel another’s pain; courage to act when it is costly or inconvenient.
  • Honesty: Humility to admit fault; courage to speak truth even at personal risk.

Conclusion: Principles That Outlast Us

Universal principles like respect, compassion, patience, and tolerance endure across time and culture because they align with the deepest voice of human conscience. Yet they cannot be lived through intellect alone. They require the character attributes of humility and courage.

  • Humility teaches us that my ego is smaller than the truth.
  • Courage teaches us that the truth is worth any cost.

Together, they allow us to honor what is universal and timeless, ensuring that in the face of life’s tests, we remain aligned not with fleeting desires but with enduring values.

[1] That is to say that it is impossible for them to enter paradise.