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Progress That Only God Sees

 

 

 

یہ مضمون اردو میں پڑھیں

 

“It feels different now,” I said quietly as we sat stuck at a traffic signal, horns blaring all around us. “I don’t feel like I’m just dealing with people anymore. I feel like I’m transacting with God.”

He turned toward me, listening carefully.

“When you see life that way,” I continued, “every moment becomes an opportunity—sometimes easy, sometimes painfully difficult—but always meaningful.”

He nodded. “And once that awareness settles in,” he said, “it becomes a powerful source of motivation.”

I thought about how true that felt. There was a time when I measured my growth only through the reactions of others—praise lifted me, criticism crushed me. But recently, something inside had shifted.

“I’ve started realizing,” I said, “that I don’t need to wait for people’s approval to know whether I’m improving. Sometimes the only witness to my progress is God.”

He smiled slightly. “That realization takes courage.”

“Especially when people comment,” I added. “Their words still sting sometimes. But now I try to ask myself one question before reacting: Am I being conscious right now?

He looked at me with quiet interest. “That question changes everything.”

“It really does,” I said. “Let me give you a very real example. My anger—especially on the road. Road rage used to own me. A wrong turn, a careless driver, a delayed signal—and I would explode. It took time. A long time. But slowly, I began noticing the moment before the anger burst.”

He leaned forward. “That’s where real change begins.”

“Yes,” I said. “At first, the anger still came. However, I could now see it arriving. And once I could see it, I could pause.”

I remembered a recent incident clearly. A motorbike nearly struck my car. My body reacted instantly—tight chest, heated breath, words rushing to my tongue. But then, something interrupted the chain. That same silent question echoed inside: Who am I responding to right now—this person… or God?

“For the first time,” I told him, “I chose silence over shouting.”

He smiled. “That’s not a small victory.”

“But here’s the strange part,” I said. “No one noticed. The driver sped off. The passengers in my car were busy on their phones. There was no applause. No validation.”

“That’s how most real progress looks,” he replied. “Invisible.”

“That’s what surprised me,” I said. “The development is happening—I can feel it. But the people around me may still see me the way I used to be. And that’s not in my control.”

He nodded slowly. “Growth that depends on recognition becomes fragile. Growth that happens before God becomes steady.”

I sat with that thought.

“You know,” I said after a pause, “there was a time I would have been discouraged by this. I would have asked: What’s the use of changing if no one notices?

“And now?” he asked.

“Now I realize,” I said, “that the fact I can notice it is enough. The fact that God knows is enough.”

He leaned back against the seat. “That’s a powerful shift—from performing for people to progressing with God.”

I felt a quiet strength settle in my chest.

“This journey isn’t dramatic,” I said softly. “It’s slow. Layer by layer. Slip by slip. Sometimes I do better. Sometimes I fall back. But a process is unfolding.”

“And that process,” he said, “is the real gift.”

I watched the traffic finally begin to move.

“So, the motivation,” I reflected aloud, “doesn’t come from being perfect. It comes from seeing that God is still giving me chances to improve—again and again. Sometimes with ease. Sometimes through difficulty.”

He looked at me and said gently, “And you must learn to draw strength from that alone.”

The signal turned green. Cars moved forward. Life resumed its ordinary noise.

But inside me, something remained still and clear. Progress was happening. Quietly. Gradually. Sometimes only between God and me.

And for the first time, that felt more than enough.

Wrong Decisions Made with Good Intentions

 

 

 

یہ مضمون اردو میں پڑھیں

I once went through something painful and confusing — and if you’ve ever made a sincere decision that later turned out to be wrong, you’ll understand me.

I remember asking my teacher one day, almost with guilt in my voice, “I made a decision with full sincerity. I believed it was right. But years later, I realized it wasn’t. And people were affected by it. I can’t undo the past. What do I do with this guilt?”

He smiled gently and replied, “This is part of being human. Good intentions do not guarantee perfect judgment. You acted sincerely — and that sincerity matters.”

He reminded me that we are not angels who always know the whole truth; we are humans who discover it gradually. Then he asked me, “First, reflect honestly — did you act in reaction or in ego? Or did you sincerely believe it was right at the time?”

That question changed everything for me.

Sometimes we act out of hurt or haste. But sometimes we genuinely do our best — and still fall short. And that’s not a moral failure; it’s part of learning.

He continued, “Life requires ijtihād — continuous moral judgment. Sometimes you’ll be right, sometimes wrong. That is how growth happens.”

His words softened something inside me. Then I whispered, “But what about the consequences? People got hurt…”

He responded, “If someone suffered, apologize sincerely. Say, ‘That was my honest view then, but I don’t hold it anymore.’ This humility is strength, not weakness.”

And then he said something that freed me, “Outcomes are in God’s hands. Your duty is sincerity, reflection, correction, and humility — not perfection.”

He told me guilt is useful only until it turns into self-punishment. When guilt ceases to inspire growth and begins to crush you, it’s no longer conscience — it’s ego in disguise.

That day I understood:

A sincere mistake is not a sin.
A stubborn ego is.
Learning is nobler than pretending to be flawless.
And God values honesty + humility more than a spotless record.

I left with a new guiding principle: Act sincerely while staying open to better understanding.

I may not always be right — but I can always be honest, humble, and evolving.

And that, my teacher reminded me, is what makes a heart alive.

 

Your turn

Think of one decision you once believed was right — but later learned from.

Ask yourself:

  • What principle did I miss?
  • Was it a reaction or a sincere judgment?
  • What did this teach me?
  • Do I owe someone an apology or acknowledgement?

Write it down.

Not to shame yourself — but to honor your growth.

Because true maturity is not about always being right —
It is being honest enough to change when you learn better.

The Path Is Clear, but the Mind Resists the Journey

 

 

یہ مضمون اردو میں پڑھیں

There are times when a person knows exactly what the right thing to do is — the path is clear, the rules are established, the conscience is alert — and yet, when the moment arrives, something inside resists. You may aim to stay calm, be polite, act honestly, or respond with grace, but when the test comes, your emotions surge faster than your values can anchor you. This quiet inner conflict is one of the most human struggles of all: when clarity of direction encounters resistance of the mind.

The Illusion of Arrival

We often think that once we set our moral rules — honesty, patience, kindness, humility — the goal is to “achieve” them, to reach perfection. But human growth doesn’t resemble climbing a mountain with a summit; it’s more like walking through an endless, ever-deepening valley. You never fully ‘become’ patient or completely honest; you just become more so. The very act of striving becomes the destination.

A teacher once said, “The journey itself is the arrival.” The day you stop striving, you stop living consciously. So, the frustration that you still lose your temper or still struggle to forgive is not proof of failure — it’s proof that your journey is alive.

Diagnosing the Real Blockers

When we fall short of our principles, our natural reaction is often guilt or regret: “I knew better; why couldn’t I do better?” But self-blame masks a deeper question: what is holding me back?

  • For one person, the barrier might be fear of rejection — “If I act differently, my friends or spouse may pull away.”
  • For another, it’s fear of loss — “If I stay honest, I’ll lose my advantage.”
  • For yet another, it’s cost intolerance — “The emotional or social price of doing the right thing is too heavy.”

These blockers aren’t sins; they are developmental thresholds. They reveal where your mind still negotiates between comfort and conscience.

A Simple Example: The Politeness Dilemma

Consider someone who genuinely strives to stay polite, even during heated family arguments. She practices mindfulness, repeats affirmations, prays for calm — yet, when her husband or child raises their voice, her own voice automatically gets louder. Later, she regrets it deeply.

At first glance, it appears to be a failure of self-control. But upon further reflection, two possibilities come to mind:

  1. She lost consciousness — her emotions overwhelmed her awareness in that heated moment.
  2. She remained conscious but couldn’t stop herself — a deeper conflict inside her fought against the rule she believed in.

The second case is particularly interesting. Even as she remembers, “I should remain polite,” another voice emerges: “If I stay polite, he’ll keep disrespecting me. He’ll take advantage of my weakness.”

That thought — subtle, unspoken, self-protective — becomes the real saboteur.

The Mind’s Hidden Immunity to Change

Robert Kegan and Lisa Lahey describe this as the “immunity to change.” It’s the mind’s innate resistance that guards us against perceived danger — even if the danger no longer exists. We develop mental models to cope with emotional threats.

For example:

  • If I don’t stand up for myself, I’ll be taken for granted.
  • “If I forgive too easily, people will exploit me.”
  • “If I stay calm, I’ll seem weak.”

Such beliefs might have been true once — maybe during childhood or an earlier painful relationship — but they quietly linger even as life changes. Therefore, every time the person tries to grow, these hidden commitments pull her back, shielding her from imaginary threats while depriving her of real peace.

Testing the Assumptions

Freedom begins when you name your assumptions. The next time you resist your own values, ask:

  • What am I afraid will happen if I act according to my principles?
  • Is that fear always true?
  • What would happen if I acted on faith rather than fear?

You might find that the world doesn’t fall apart when you choose calm instead of retaliation. Others might even respect you more, not less. Gradually, false assumptions lose their power, and the true purpose — to live rightly, not just to avoid being exploited — becomes more apparent.

A Personal Anecdote

I once counseled a young professional who wanted to stop responding harshly to his team’s mistakes. He knew it damaged morale and contradicted his values. Yet every time someone erred, anger flared up.

When we explored it, he realized his deeper belief was: “If I don’t get angry, they won’t take me seriously.” This was a model learned from his childhood — where only shouting got things done. Once he saw that, he began to experiment: giving feedback firmly but calmly. To his surprise, productivity improved. His mind had been protecting him from an outdated threat.

Re-anchoring the ‘Why’

Ultimately, the question is not “How can I stop being impolite?” but “Why do I want to be polite?”

If the goal is simply to avoid conflict or to seem virtuous, the resolve will break down under pressure. But if the goal is spiritual — to embody grace and to meet the Creator’s expectations — then the soul finds a deeper motivation. The effort becomes worship, not just performance.

The Journey of Becoming

The journey of self-reform isn’t a straight path but an ongoing dialogue between conscience and conditioning. Every stumble teaches humility; every recovery builds resilience. The route is visible — the principles are understood — but the mind must learn to surrender its fears and illusions along the way.

Growth doesn’t mean never stumbling; it means recognizing each stumble as part of the sacred journey home.

Reflection Prompt:

  • When was the last time you knew the right thing to do but couldn’t do it?
  • What hidden fear or belief might have resisted your better self?
  • And what would change if your “why” became stronger than your fear?

 

یہ مضمون اردو میں پڑھیں

A key question in religious life is: what truly drives us to carry out our responsibilities? Is it the watchful eye of others, the fear of authority, or the living presence of faith in our hearts? The distinction matters greatly because it influences the durability and sincerity of our actions.

The Fragility of Fear-Based Motivation

When motivation relies solely on fear—such as the fear of parents—its effect is temporary. As long as their watchful eyes are on us, we may behave with discipline. But once that gaze is removed, the sense of urgency diminishes. Fear rooted in human oversight cannot support a lifelong commitment. It remains conditional, circumstantial, and externally driven.

Faith as an Inner Source

By contrast, when someone’s religious life comes from faith, there’s no need for external oversight. A person rooted in faith is motivated from within, even when unseen. The Qur’anic perspective on motivation isn’t about compliance while being watched, but about an awakened awareness: knowing that God observes us whether we are in the open or under a desk, whether praised by others or hidden from view.

Consequences Vs. Conditioning

Some may object: If God motivates us with reward and punishment, why can’t parents or others do the same?

The first and most fundamental difference is this: God does not use reward and punishment as tools of behavior training or modification. The rewards and punishments mentioned in the Qur’an are not reinforcements designed to shape habits; rather, they are the ultimate consequences of our deeds. Once those consequences appear in the Hereafter, there is no possibility of change or improvement. Human beings, on the other hand, employ rewards and punishments in a very different way: as temporary reinforcements to encourage or discourage behavior, with the aim of improvement and growth, not eternal condemnation or reward.

A second difference follows from this: Divine promises of reward and warnings of punishment take root in faith. Once a person believes, these truths become part of their worldview. They are not external constraints but internalized realities. Thus, even in solitude, the believer’s heart whispers: “My Lord sees me.” No other fear or motivation can compare to this inner certainty.

Choosing Integrity Beyond Oversight

This distinction presents a timeless challenge: will we choose a life guided by inward faith or one controlled solely by human authority? A life of faith means our honesty, responsibility, and discipline stay intact, no matter who is watching. It is the difference between merely appearing obedient and genuinely being committed.

A Practical Framework: Moving from Fear-Based to Faith-Based Motivation

  1. Awareness of Source
    Ask yourself: Why am I doing this act? If the answer is “to please someone” or “to avoid punishment from people,” pause and reorient. Shift the “why” from people to God.
  2. Internalizing Divine Presence
    Develop the habit of quietly reminding yourself: God sees me here and now. This practice slowly roots your actions in His presence rather than in human approval.
  3. Private Acts of Worship
    Intentionally perform good deeds in secret—such as small prayers, acts of charity, or kindness that only God sees. These strengthen internal motivation.
  4. Reframing Reward and Punishment
    Instead of viewing divine reward as a bribe and punishment as a threat, see them as natural consequences of being in or out of alignment with God’s truth. This shifts obedience from a transaction to a matter of conviction.
  5. Journaling Integrity Checks
    At the end of each day, note moments when you acted solely because of people’s presence, and moments when you acted purely for God. Over time, this practice reveals patterns and enables change.
  6. Gradual Replacement, Not Rebellion
    Respect parental or social authority, but don’t depend on it. View it as scaffolding that should eventually be replaced by the inner pillar of faith.

Conclusion

True moral growth starts when the fear of human authority is replaced by awareness of God. Faith turns obligation into devotion, watching into sincerity, and external pressure into internal freedom. When our motivation comes from faith, it supports us not only in public but also in quiet moments where no human can see.