Something
that Muslims often refer back to and which gives many Muslims solace is the
promise that no one will be burdened with more than they can bear:
“Allah does not burden a soul beyond that it
can bear…” (Qur’an, 2:286).
For
some reason then, we do what we are obligated to do and then find more for
ourselves to do. Then we decide that is
not enough and we must do even more: have a perfect home, amazing children,
tend to our marriages, have a high flying career, a whirlwind social life, do
lots of social good and then of course squeeze in extended family, worship,
studies and recreation in all of the cracks so that life is bursting at the
seams and our bodies are protesting.
So
obviously we then stop, take stock, go back to doing the bare minimum obligated
on us and make sure we get rest and recharge.
Okay so maybe not. We find
ourselves doing too much, try to do more and then try to find ways to keep
going. So instead of listening to our
bodies, many people I know or work with are propping themselves up with coffee,
energy drinks and copious amounts of sugar.
We stop listening to the natural rhythms of our internal cycles and the
demands of our bodies to stop, rest, eat the right things and stop doing the
things that make us feel bored, numb and artificially alert (read wired).
I have
always had a high sugar intake in my diet – I love chocolate ever so much. Then slowly out of sheer boredom, the daily
morning coffee has crept into my diet – my favourite full fat milky latte, not
cheap either. I remember the year before
last (I was pregnant and unable to fast last year) fasting during Ramadan meant
that the caffeine and sugar suddenly fell out of my diet. I could not understand why my whole body was
aching so much. It lasted a week before
my body accepted it wasn’t going to get anymore artificial shots of
stimulant. Then the pain stopped and the
fog lifted from my mind making me feel clear headed and naturally alert and a
little more in touch with my body.
So I
have decided to stop drinking coffee from today and then cut down on cola and
chocolate over the next few days. So far
it has been torturous. I have spent most
of the day trying to concentrate and keep awake and not fall off of my
chair. I went to the loo and nearly fell
asleep – I don’t know how I would have explained that one:
Manager:
where were you?
Me: In
the loo
Manager:
For two hours?
Me:
Yes, I had a bit of a problem…
In any
case over the course of the day the fog is lifting. I had to resort to chocolate for lunch, but
plan to abstain for the rest of the day.
It just
made me think about how unkind we are to ourselves, we give in to our desires
like children even when they do not benefit us.
We self-medicate with food, caffeine, sugar when we are not really
hungry. Instead we are usually bored,
unfulfilled and aimless. If we were
inspired and motivated, we would keep on going, we would find ourselves in our
flow and be so lost in our work that we would not feel so tired and we would
not need stimulants to keep going. So
instead of stopping ourselves from doing what makes us miserable, and finding
something that feeds into our purpose and sets our soul on fire we find ways to
keep going against our hearts wishes and end up overweight, spotty and very
unhealthy in the process.
So
having found my purpose and set my soul on fire over the course of many years,
I know need to deal with my food addictions and re-engage with the rhythms and
needs of my body. I am going to push
through my desire for coffee and chocolate and hopefully make my first week of
Ramadan easier than it otherwise would have been insh’Allah
Your post is spot on! We over indulge so much. I normally reduce my caffeine intake a month before Ramadan, I make the withdrawal gradual and it has worked for me for the last couple of years. I hope this Ramadan is a productive one for all of us.May Allah make it easy on all of us.
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