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You Are Teaching, Even When You Say Nothing

 

 

 

یہ مضمون اردو میں پڑھیں

I once asked him a question that felt almost casual. “Why do you always pause before doing the simplest things?”

He smiled, not amused, but thoughtful. “Because,” he said, “someone is always watching.”

I looked around instinctively. The room was ordinary. No audience. No spotlight.

“Not like that,” he added, noticing my confusion. “I don’t mean someone appointed to judge you. I mean, someone quietly learning from you.”

I frowned. “Learning what? I’m not teaching anything.”

He leaned back. “That’s the illusion. You think teaching only happens when you speak in a room full of students. In reality, it happens every time you act.”

I protested. “But most of what I do is insignificant. I stand, I sit, I leave, I stay. These aren’t lessons.”

He nodded. “Exactly. Those are the lessons that go deepest.”

He gave me a simple image. “Imagine a crowded place,” he said. “A waiting hall. Everyone is sitting. One person stands up. Nothing dramatic. A minute passes. Another stands. Then another. Soon, half the room is on its feet.”

“Yes,” I said, “I’ve seen that happen.”

“Now imagine the opposite,” he continued. “People are standing, restless, unsure. One person calmly sits down. Slowly, others follow.”

I laughed. “True.”

He looked at me seriously. “Now tell me—who gave a lecture?”

I didn’t answer.

“That,” he said, “is influence without permission.” He explained that human beings are predisposed to mirror one another. Long before we reason, we imitate. Children don’t learn values from speeches; they learn from watching. Employees don’t absorb ethics from policy documents; they absorb them from how their seniors behave under pressure. Communities don’t know courage from slogans; they learn it from who steps forward first.

“Even silence teaches,” he said. “Even withdrawal teaches. Even compromise teaches.”

I asked, “But what if I didn’t intend to teach anything?”

He smiled again. “Intention is irrelevant. Visibility is enough.”

Then, he told me a story from his own life. “There was a time,” he said, “when I would cut small corners and justify them easily. Nothing illegal. Nothing scandalous. Just little things. One day, someone younger than me did the same thing and said, ‘I saw you do it once, so I thought it was fine.’”

He paused. “That day, I realized I had been training people without realizing I was a trainer.”

I felt uncomfortable. “That sounds heavy.”

“It is,” he said gently. “But it is also empowering.”

“How is that empowering?” I asked.

“Once you accept that you are always modeling something,” he said, “you stop pretending that your choices are private. You begin to ask better questions.”

“Like what?”

“Like: If someone copies this, am I okay with the world having more of it? If my child saw this, what would they learn? If this became normal, what kind of society would it create?”

He leaned forward. “These questions turn ordinary moments into moral moments.”

I thought about how often people say, “I’m not a leader,” or “I’m not important,” or “No one notices me.”

He anticipated my thought. “Leadership is not a title,” he said. “It’s a position you occupy the moment your actions are observable.”

He explained that in families, one sibling sets the emotional temperature. In friendships, one person sets the standard for honesty. In public spaces, one act of integrity—or one act of apathy—quietly gives others permission to do the same.

“We are constantly giving permissions,” he said. “Through courage or cowardice. Through patience or irritation. Through honesty or convenience.”

I asked him, almost defensively, “So what’s the solution? To live under constant pressure?”

He shook his head. “Not pressure. Awareness.”

He explained that the goal is not perfection, but alignment. Not performance, but responsibility. “You don’t need to be dramatic,” he said. “You just need to be deliberate.”

He told me about a man who refused to pay a small bribe, fully expecting to be inconvenienced. Others in the line watched silently. The clerk hesitated, then processed the request anyway. No speech was made. No slogans were raised. But something shifted. “That man,” he said, “taught a room full of strangers how dignity looks.”

As the conversation ended, one sentence stayed with me.

“You are already influencing,” he said. “The only choice you have is whether you will do it unconsciously or consciously.”

I realized then that life is not waiting for us to become role models. It assumes we already are.

Every step forward or backward, every stand or retreat, every quiet decision made in full view of others—these are lessons being taught in real time.

And whether we like it or not, someone, somewhere, is taking notes.

When the Battle Inside Begins

 

 

 

یہ مضمون اردو میں پڑھیں

It was one of those slow winter afternoons when time itself feels reflective. We were sitting on the university lawn, watching the sun gently fold itself across the grass. I could tell he had something on his mind. His silence carried weight.

When God Knows the Insides of Our Hearts

He finally broke the silence. “Tell me something,” he said, picking at the corner of his notebook. “Does God really know what goes on inside us? The thoughts we’re scared to admit… even to ourselves?”

I smiled, not because the question was easy, but because it was so universal. “More than you think,” I said. “He knows every intention. Every whisper. Every hidden plan. Even the thoughts we discard before they fully form. Nothing inside us is hidden from Him.”

Then I gave him an example. “You know when you see someone succeed and, for a second, envy stings? You don’t say it, you don’t act on it—but you feel it? Even that tiny spark… God knows.”

He exhaled slowly, as if some truth had just landed on his chest.

When the nafs Starts Whispering

“But look…” he said, lowering his voice, “Sometimes my nafs tells me to do something I know is wrong—like taking revenge, proving someone wrong, or saying something hurtful. I feel the pull. But then I stop myself because I fear God. So what is that? Hypocrisy? Weakness?”

His question hid a secret guilt—guilt I had felt many times myself. “That inner pull,” I said softly, “doesn’t make you a hypocrite. It makes you human. Every heart has a corner where the ego whispers and temptation grows.”

Then, to clarify my point, I continued, “You remember Ahmed from our second semester? The day someone insulted him in front of the class, he told me later he had the perfect comeback ready on his tongue. A line that would have publicly humiliated the guy. But he swallowed it. Not out of fear—out of dignity. Out of consciousness.”

He nodded. He remembered.

“That struggle,” I continued, “is not hypocrisy. It is the hardest kind of self-control.”

The Two Roads Inside the Human Heart

I held a dry leaf between my fingers and said, “There are always two roads:

Road 1 — Hypocrisy:

When someone knows their heart is full of bitterness, revenge, and arrogance… but hides it behind smiles, sweet words, and fake kindness. Like the colleague who envies your promotion but says, ‘Oh, I’m SO happy for you,’ while burning inside. This is deception. A mask. An unwillingness to face the truth within.

Road 2 — Mujāhada (Struggle):

When a dark thought arises, but the person immediately feels discomfort, resists it, and says, ‘No. This is not who I want to be. God sees me. I will not act on this.’ Like when your sibling hurts you, and everything inside screams, “Say something back! Hurt them too!” but you breathe, calm yourself, and walk away. That is not a weakness. That is worship. That is character.”

He lowered his gaze and said, “I always thought that because I felt the wrong impulse… I’m a bad person.”

The Real Test: Choosing God Over the Whisper of the nafs

“That’s the misunderstanding,” I said. “The presence of a bad thought is not the problem. The decision you make afterward is what truly defines you.” I pointed to my chest. “Every time you feel anger rising… every time jealousy flickers… every time revenge seems sweet… and you stop yourself because God is watching—that moment weighs more than tons of good deeds.”

I shared with him a story I once read: A scholar was traveling with his student. A rude man repeatedly insulted the student. The student clenched his fists but stayed silent. Later, the scholar said, “You performed two prayers today: one with your tongue and one with your heart. The second one was the real prayer.”

He actually smiled. “For the first time,” he said, “someone made that struggle sound valuable.”

The Quiet Peace of Winning Invisible Battles

“You know,” I said, “sometimes I feel more proud of the sins I didn’t commit than the good deeds I did.”

He laughed softly. “That’s true. The things I resist… nobody ever sees.”

“But God does,” I said. “And that’s why He rewards the hidden struggle more than the visible deeds.”

I gave him another everyday example: “Think of when someone speaks harshly to you. Your ego tells you to snap back instantly. But if you pause… even for two seconds… that pause is a spiritual victory. You have wrestled your ego and pinned it down.”

The Battle Inside Is Not a Weakness—It’s Worship

Finally, I concluded, “Look, wrong thoughts will come. Whisperings will come. Temptations will come. But every time you refuse to follow them — every time you choose God’s pleasure over your ego’s pleasure — you become a stronger, purer, deeper human being.”

His eyes softened as he said, “So the inner war isn’t a sign that I’m failing… It’s a sign that my heart is alive?”

I nodded. “Exactly. A heart that struggles is a heart that still cares. A heart that still hears God.”

As we stood up to leave, the sun dipped behind the building, casting a long golden shadow on the ground. In that moment, I realized something: maybe the most extraordinary acts of devotion are not the prayers people see but the battles we fight quietly inside, simply because our Lord is watching.