I asked the question hesitantly, because it didn’t sound noble. “What if the cost of standing by your principles isn’t just paid by you?” I said. “What if your family, your children, people you love start paying that cost too?”
He didn’t dismiss the question. He leaned into it.
“That,” he said, “is where courage stops being theoretical.”
He explained that when we talk about courage, we often imagine a single hero standing tall, absorbing all the consequences alone. But real life is messier. “Sometimes,” he said, “the price of integrity is paid with ego. Sometimes with money. And sometimes… with people around you.” Careers suffer. Families feel pressure. Relationships get strained. In extreme cases, history reminds us that lives are threatened, even taken.
“So how far,” I asked, “is one supposed to go?”
“This is where people make a mistake,” he said. “They want a formula.” Tell me exactly how much I must sacrifice. Tell me where courage ends, and recklessness begins. Tell me what is required. He shook his head. “There is no fixed rule,” he said. “Because courage is not a checklist. It’s a capacity.” A person’s capacity for courage—how much they can bear, how far they can go—is not something others can measure or impose. It is something that unfolds between the individual and God.
“Your growth,” he said, “your strength, your endurance—this is a matter of tawfiq. Of what God has enabled in you so far.”
Then he said something deeply liberating.
“Religion itself recognizes limits.” He reminded me that even in matters of faith, there are concessions. A person whose life is under threat is allowed to speak words of denial—so long as their heart remains firm. “This permission,” he said, “is mercy.” And mercy exists because God knows human limits. “But permission does not mean compulsion,” he added. Just because something is allowed does not mean it must be taken. And just because someone chooses a higher path does not mean everyone is obligated to follow. “Those who chose martyrdom were not following a rule,” he said. “They were answering a call their hearts were ready for.”
This distinction changed everything for me.
“There are two levels,” he said. “What you are allowed to do—and what you aspire to become.” Aspiration is noble. Demand is dangerous. “I can pray,” he said, “that if the moment ever comes, God gives me the strength to stand fully for truth—even at the highest cost.” But I cannot demand that of myself. And I certainly cannot demand it of others. “God has not demanded it,” he said. “So who are we to?”
He spoke next about something rarely acknowledged: humility in courage.
“If the cost keeps increasing,” he said, “and you find yourself stepping back—it doesn’t always mean cowardice.” Sometimes it means your strength hasn’t developed yet. “That awareness,” he said, “is humility.” Not self-loathing. Not excuses. Just honesty. “I may not be there yet,” he said. “And that’s something I take to God—not something I hide from.”
Then he brought it back to the ground. “Don’t think courage is built in extraordinary moments,” he said. “It’s built in ordinary ones.” Daily honesty when lying would be easier. Daily restraint when retaliation is tempting. Daily integrity when compromise feels safer.
“These are today’s demands,” he said. “Meet these.” And if you meet these consistently, something quietly happens inside you. “Your capacity grows,” he said. Not dramatically. Not overnight. But genuinely.
He warned me about something subtle but serious. “If you start adjusting principles too early,” he said, “you weaken the muscle before it ever develops.” Small compromises train you to rationalize. Repeated rationalization trains fear. And fear slowly replaces conscience. “I’m not saying demand heroism from yourself,” he clarified. “I’m saying don’t preemptively surrender.”
He ended with something that felt neither harsh nor comforting—but real. “Life is difficult,” he said. “The world is not meant to be easy. You will leave it one day. Your children will too.”
That reminder wasn’t morbid. It was clarifying.
“The question,” he said, “is not how to avoid cost. It’s how to be ready when cost appears.” Do today’s courage today. Leave tomorrow’s courage to God. “If a greater trial ever comes,” he said quietly, “and God wills, He may give you the strength you don’t yet have.”
Courage is not a switch you flip in crisis. It is a capacity you grow in calm. And the wisest path is neither reckless heroics nor fearful retreat—but a steady, humble commitment to truth at the level you are actually able to live today. Between permission and aspiration, between mercy and greatness, between who you are and who you hope to become—that is where real courage lives.



