Bismihi Ta’ala
Jameela Part 74
Pain can be beautiful too.
I never quite believed it until it happened to me, but when I realised all the beautiful things that can come out of a broken heart, and all those shattered pieces didn’t seem so devastating any longer.
And as I went on the tedious task of reconstructing my heart, just the way I wanted… I came to realise that on the bad days, there was nothing quite like drowning your sorrows in nature while the world goes on around you.
And that’s what brought me back to the beauty.
Beauty surrounded us. Nature was filled with treaties that if look beyond and through everything that happens to us, everything we do—or fail to do—and see Allah, then we will have gotten the purpose. When something happens that you hate, or love, be careful not to miss the point.
Remember that nothing happens without a reason.
Purpose.
No event in your life, no sadness, no delight, pain, no pleasure… no heartbreak, was created without a purpose.
And purpose is such that… when we can’t seem to figure it out, we are always looking for signs. We are always asking for our Rabb to ‘speak’ to us. But those signs are all around us. They are in everything. Allah is always ‘speaking’. The question is whether we are listening.
And sometimes it was hard to drown everything else out and just pay attention to what Allah is telling us.
Especially when Nani was competing for my sanity, and in her own weird thinking, she truly believed that my sole purpose was to marry a wealthy man and procreate as soon as I could.
My purpose though, was different. It wasn’t about a man, because I knew now, that I would love Allah above him. That was the purpose of my heartbreak. It was more than just an heartbreak. It was a reason for returning to my merciful Rabb who always welcomes me back with more love than I can ever imagine.
And even though i knew all this, and I knew the purpose of this pain, it didn’t mean that I didn’t second guess myself at the slightest opportunity.
It didn’t help that Nani had been given me the 411 on how ungrateful I was and how nothing I did was right. It was a week of hearing about Doctorsaab and his amazing position that he held at the local hospital. She was clearly trying to show me how much I was missing out on and I wasn’t in the least bit concerned about it.
I wasn’t supposed to be listening as I passed by the kitchen to go out that day, but I had heard. I had been tracking Zubair’s whereabouts to avoid him as best as possible, and I knew that today was a safe day to venture out without him being around. My father had been dropping little hints about how he wanted to have a good talk with Zubair, but I really didn’t want this to become bigger than it was.
I just wanted it to go away.
”How can she be so fussy?”
I knew that she was talking about me.
Nani was talking in a hushed -(well, as hushed as Nani can be)- tone to my mother as I passed the kitchen.
“So ungrateful,” she muttered to herself as she pulled out her kitaab and retied her dupatta, making sure that every inch of her hair was covered. “Whole family is like this, that’s why. You too, Bhengori. I try so hard and you don’t even try to talk some sense in the girl. If the mother and the sister are like this what else can you expect from the girl.”
I gritted my teeth. Really. Trust Nani to drag my whole family into an issue that had nothing to do with them at all.
And of course, seeing Nani do it made me think of how often we do that too. Instead of thinking the best, like the Sunnah of our Nabi (Sallalahu Alaihi wa Sallam), we assumed the worst. And it doesn’t get left at that. Someone does something wrong, and their entire family gets chucked into the mix, extended relations included, with no valid reason whatsoever.
“Mummy, when don’t we listen to you?” my mother was saying, sounding a little angry. “You can’t force her to marry him. Mohsina said that she was upset. Don’t tell her anything please. Just leave her for now. It’s not easy for her. Let her keep the decision in peace so she won’t feel forced to change back.”
”You think she will change her mind?” Nani’s voice was hopeful as she said it, and I felt my own heart sinking, wondering if I could do anything right.
“Mohsina said not to get out hopes up…”
My mother was still talking but Nani wasn’t quite interested.
“What Mohsina Mohsina?” she snapped, her eyes glaring over her glasses. I couldn’t see her expression but I could tell that she meant business from her tone. “Mohsina is the reason for all this. The one that is teaching her all these silly ideas. I thought Jameela was different. Better. But she is just like her sister. At least Mohsina came to her senses by force and married someone suitable. Who knows what Jameela will do. She will end up with one useless fellow who has no job.”
That stung. I could practically hear the resentment in her voice. But to judge a guy based solely on their income bracket and appearance was as shallow as it gets.
It wasn’t like I didn’t want to be like my sister. It was just that I didn’t want to be the villain in this story. I had a good mind of barging in and telling them that I was ready to marry Doctorsaab just to prove them a point but I just couldn’t do it. Also, my father was quite adamant that he wasn’t the one that was right for me, and though I agreed, there was something else I realised.
I was in a major fix because no matter what I did here, someone got hurt.
I sighed as I pondered over my predicament, annoyed that I had let things get this bad. I needed to pull myself out of the hole I had sunk into, and see the rainbow beyond all the rain here.
And as I sat, my thoughts miles away, the beautiful pastures before me as the breeze caressed my cheeks, I couldn’t help but let my mind venture to the obvious here.
Being here, in the wilderness and the centre of ultimate natural beauty, was an awakening that of course, nothing happens without purpose. not fear. Not pain. Not even rejection.
I had been mortified. Absolutely embarrassed and ashamed that I had let things go far.
And then I remembered the little post it note that someone had put in the coffee shop, and I realised what our true purpose was about.
He breaks you to build you. Deprives you to give you. The pain in your heart was created to make you learn less for this life.
And to yearn more for Jannah.
Jannah. The epitome of beauty. The greatest of gardens. The most sublime kind of bliss.
And immediately, my heart felt soothed. With every little ache and pain, it reminded me of the purpose of being here. It awakened me from the slumber I had been in, as I pondered over the words of the Qur’ān.
So instead of giving in, instead of giving up, as I lay under the single weeping willow tree in the furtherest part of the farm, on the little log that lay next to the thickened tree trunk that was no less than a century old, there was nothing else, other than the words of Allah that soothed me.
And there was no other place in the garden that made me feel so serene, as did this beautiful tree, that seemed to match the morbid mood I had found myself in when I first got here.
The thing with technology was that everything kept bringing you back to the spaces in your life that you wanted to fill. Every hit of dopamine that social media gave, every app that was created to remedy loneliness, was exactly the cause of all the discontentment in the world.
Sitting on my phone, reading a senseless book or wasting time on my browser would always bring me back to the huge voids in my life that I was trying so hard to not think about.
No one ever tells you about these feelings that come in between. No one tells you about the behind the scenes. The inadequacy. The pain. The wishing that you were anywhere else but in your own shoes.
Sometimes you had to look at others to truly appreciate everything you have. Sometimes being content with your lot means lowering your gaze from everything that doesn’t belong to you.
And so, as I pieced my broken pieces together, knowing that I couldn’t quite face Nani again right then after escaping outside, I knew that visiting my sister was next on the list. I had realised that I had been a teeny bit selfish the last few days. I had come back and got stuck in a place where no one knew where my mind was at. I had been drowning in my sorrows.
And as my phone buzzed with a message from Maahira, it was obviously divinely sent for me to climb out of the darkened hole I had sunk into.
Hunny, have u seen Mos lately? She says she’s fine but I don’t kno. Is she holding up?
And just with that, I realised that maybe I had become too focused on my own problems, to realise that my sister was going through something much more devastating.
I’ll check. x
And only when I made up my mind to give her a call, and she took forever to get back to me, did I realise just how much it had missed out on while I was caught up in my own little bubble of chaos.
I barely knew that Mohsina was literally running from pillar to post, trying to sort out custody and legalities and a few unexpected accusations from Hammonds that had just come up.
And of course, I couldn’t just sit there and do nothing. I had called Papa to ask if I could use the car to visit her, and knowing that I had to figure out what was going on, took the 20 minute drive to my sisters new flat, anxious about what she was going to tell me.
Here I was wondering what I would so with my broken heart, when her entire life was breaking apart.
I took deep breaths as I climbed the steps to get block, a little worried for my sister by then. She buzzed me up, and met me at the door, and I was relieved that she looked glad to see me. Maybe even a little relieved that I was at her place, for the first time since she moved, and a week after I was back, and looking like I was all put together.
“How are you feeling?” She asked, scanning my face as I entered her place, feeling quite unsettled about everything she had told me so far. I didn’t know that what she had divulged was only the tip of the iceberg.
Hamzah wasn’t there and her expression was stagnant as I tried to read her. Considering everything she had been through during the past few days, I had no idea how she was keeping it together.
“I’m fine,” I said, brushing off my own feelings as I watched her.
She wanted to ask about Zubair and I didn’t want to talk. To me, he was dead. That was the only way I could heal completely. Plus, I was feeling so much better than I was a week ago.
Mohsina gave a small smile, almost as if she knew, and I watched as she walked to the kitchen, admiring her in a pastel yellow blouse with grey wide leg pants that sat on her hip, and her hair tied back in a bun. Her cheeks were flushed and pretty, almost as if she had been doing some exercise, but I knew she hadn’t. She was just slightly more highly strung than usual and I wanted to hug her as I saw her forehead crease slightly in worry as she pulled herself up onto the bar stool.
“How are you coping?”
She shook her head and shrugged, and I was a little amazed at the patience she was showing in this situation.
I knew that Faadil was responsible for the accusations against her. Maahi had filled in me in on a little, but what I didn’t know was that he was also in some trouble as well.
I couldn’t stop thinking about Faadil and the day I had met him. Something about the way he looked at her, the way he had been so invested in ‘helping’ her… something about his graciousness had rubbed me up the wrong way
Rumour had it through some friends who were still at Hammonds that Faadil had been embezzling money for a while now, and no-one had picked it up. Well, until now. That’s how Mos’s name had come into the mix. If Mohsina was romantically involved with him and they had made purchases together, it was natural that she would also catch the fall for it.
”We’re waiting to meet the lawyers next week,” she said, sounding completely calm for someone who was under scrutiny for fraud. “I think it’s best to try and make a deal with them before this gets out of hand. That will sort out the legal part.”
“Why?” I said, not understanding how it all works. “Why must you make a deal. You’re innocent.”
She sighed, avoiding my gaze.
“Not completely,” she said softly. “I took money from Faadil. He didn’t take my calls but he emailed to say that he never meant to get my name involved. He was adamant that this wasn’t the plan, and he kept saying that what we had wasn’t just about money, and I had to believe him.”
She rolled her eyes and I widened mine. It looked like he was a teeny bit hung up on her.
“Hamzah doesn’t believe him,” she sighed, not meeting my accusing eye. Of course he wouldn’t. “He thinks that there was no way that Faadil had been transparent in those deals because he knows all the loopholes and I was obviously the scapegoat for his dodgy transactions. And it’s more complicated…”
I was trying to still see my sister in the positive light that I had been seeing her the past few months. The amazing friend and woman who had given up everything for such a noble cause.
“What do you mean?”
I was so confused, because all of these things were something completely new to me. I had no idea how accounts and cash flow works in a business.
“I knew,” she said meekly, looking devastated. “It didn’t hit me at the time what it could be but I knew that he was up to something and I never told anyone. They could probably even arrest me for withholding important information.”
She trailed off and I swallowed, remembering the day when she had met Faadil with the Porsche. According to my sister, he had been so gracious. I guess that graciousness had been replaced with greed.
“Can’t you just fight the case,” I said , not liking how this was going. I didn’t know everything but I knew for certain that my sister was innocent. She didn’t take something that didn’t belong to her. She would never.
“It’s not that simple,” she said softly, shaking her head. “Someone is giving them inside information. I’m not sure exactly what they know, they they have proof that I’ve used the money for personal gain. It’s like it’s someone who knows me so well, because there are pictures of personal belongings and receipts of stuff I’ve bought when I was still working. Someone close is conspiring against me and I just cannot place my finger on who it may be.”
She breathed out and looked away, her face contorted with emotion as she said it. Who would want to hurt her so badly?
“How are things between you and Hamzah?” I asked, as she picked up her phone for the umpteenth time, almost as if checking for some update that wasn’t arriving.
I couldn’t imagine what this was doing to her, emotionally. I couldn’t imagine what Hamzah was feeling right then. The past… Mohsina’s tainted past was coming back to haunt them in the most unpleasant way.
She placed her phone down, looked me in the eye, and shrugged.
”His wife is being convicted of fraud, Jamz,” she said blandly, looking like the weight of the world was going to crush her. “It’s a strain. We’ve argued a lot. And then there’s the glaring fact. Can you imagine what this will do to him professionally? Can you imagine the stories that are going to come up here, if this blows up? What will happen to him at work? They may even think he was involved, since we were proposed before it. His job, his reputation, his and his brother’s accreditation, his everything… since he’s a shareholder for his brothers private firm… they could lose everything that they worked so hard for.”
I blinked and watched her, as she paced up and down, now a little flustered, and I could see her staring into space as her brow furrowed again and she visibly breathed in. I just didn’t know how she was keeping it all together.
It was getting more and more complicated. The whole thing was just being blown out of proportion.
“It will be okay,” I said shakily, not quite sure I I believed it myself. “Not everyone can believe what’s in the corporate media, right? There must be ways that we can push this under the rug… ways that you can make people know the truth. Isn’t there anyone you can talk to, to sort this out?”
She shook her head, and I could tell that she had already given up. I just didn’t know how far she had already taken it. She had collapsed into a chair now, and I could see a single tear rolling down her cheek as she looked at me.
I had never, ever seen my sister like this before. So fragile and so in need of saving. I just hoped that Hamzah could be her knight in shining armour, swooping in to save the day.
”It’s not fair to him either way,” she said, shaking her head, throwing her hands up in the air. “Why must he put up with this? We did this for Zaid. He didn’t sign up for this when he married me.”
Who signs up for the ugly stuff when they get married?
People encounter all sorts of hardships. Things they didn’t know or expect. Duniyaa tests us in many different ways, and Allah Ta’ala makes it clear that we will be tested, but we have to remain steadfast. Positive.
It’s not like anyone has foresight. Things happen. We make mistakes. People get hurt.
Mohsina was one of the most selfless people that I had ever met. It wasn’t fair that this was coming back to bite her, when she hadn’t even done what they were accusing her of. I was certain of her innocence.
”Mos,” I said, my heart beating faster as she looked at me, almost taunting me to ask her what she was planning. “What are you going to do next? Is there anything I can do?”
I doubted that there was anything I could do but she looked so helpless that I knew I had to try.
“This will be the end of me,” she said, looking crestfallen. “They will find out everything. I can’t drag everyone into this mess. He’s trying to be positive, but I know that if Hamzah ever finds out that I was actually proposed to Faadil, he would probably want out.”
I sucked in my breath as I looked at her, a little shocked at what she had just revealed. Did she just say that she was proposed to that idiot? What was wrong with her?
My sister had a secret life that not one of us knew about, and I couldn’t believe that she was going to marry Faadil.
“No, Mos,” I breathed, not believing what she had just said, and what she was going to say.
Her eyes were filled with remorse as she watched me standing there, my mouth half agape.
“There’s no other way,” she whispered, shrugging. “Law suits can take forever. I’m doing what’s best for him. And for Zaid. It’s the only way he can keep his job and accreditation. If we stay together we’re both going to go under.”
This wasn’t happening. This wasn’t true. I felt like pinching myself, because what was happening felt more than just a little heartbreaking. What Mohsina was about to do was an absolute nightmare for everyone.
She was already shaking her head as I appealed to her. I wanted to shake some sense into her. How could this have gotten so bad, so fast?
“Mohsina, no,” I said firmly, getting up and sitting next to her, my hands on her knees as I sat on the floor where she sat. “You guys are stronger than this, Mos. You’ll can get through this together. You guys are stronger than you think. You’ll love each other!”
She smiled through her tears, and I knew that she didn’t believe a thing that I had said.
”Love doesn’t matter here,” she said softly, her hands firmly on my shoulders as she looked into my eyes. “Jams, I know in your perfect world you think that love can solve everything…. but if you want to talk about love, it’s because I love him that I can’t put him through this. I can’t let him down because of my mistakes.
I can’t ruin the man I love.”
Oh my heart.
It just shattered, right then and there. I wasn’t even sure how much more of this I could take. I didn’t even want to ask her what next.
This was the most devastating news I had heard, after Layyanah’s passing. It was a resonating ache in my gut that felt like it was overtaking my entire body, engulfing my entire being. I was angry and resentful and I wanted to lash out at her for doing this.
“So what are you going to do next?”
The question came out almost as a sordid whisper. I didn’t even know why I was asking, because to to hear the answer was going to be the final blow that would probably dissolve me completely.
All I knew that it was the only thing that would make it real.
And oh yes, her emotionless reply was as real as it got. It was as real as the wrenching feeling in my chest, that felt precariously close to losing a vital limb.
“Next, we sign divorce papers.”
Mission Sunnah Revival
Sunnah of Thinking Good about others
We’re so quick to assume bad things about people, even when we have no idea what’s the real story. Thinking the best about others is part of the Sunnah of Nabi (Sallalahu Alaihi wa Sallam) and is a great way to give us a positive outlook and always be good to others.
He replied: “By Allah! To us The Prophet (Sallalahu Alaihi wa Sallam) was dearer to us than our riches our children and our mothers, and was more cherishable than a drink of water at the time of severest thirst.”
SubhaanAllah… what perfect imaan they had… May Allah enable us to practise..💕
#RevivetheSunnah
#RevivetheSunnahofbeingGrateful
#RevivetheSunnahofQur’aanTilaawat
#ReviveSunnahofDuaa
#SunnahofMaintainingTies
#RevivetheSunnahofSadaqah
#RevivetheSunnahofGivingGifts
#RevivetheSunnahofGoodAkhlaaq
#RevivetheSunnahbeforeSleeping
#RevivetheSunnahofGuardingtheGaze
#RevivetheSunnahofLickingtheFingers
#RevivetheSunnahofMiswaak
#RevivetheSunnahofEnteringtheToilet
#RevivetheSunnahofSpeakingGood
#RevivetheSunnahofUsingtheRighthand
FB/Instagram: @thejourneyingmuslimah
Innaa lillaah!
Poor family!
I wonder what dirt Zubair found and ohhh … how Hamzah reacts when he finds out about Mohsina’s plans! Becharo Hamzoo!
That will be just what Rabia and Faadil want!
Nani saying Jameelah is “fussy” …hhhh does she realize that he will be living with her for the rest of her life???? She hasss to be fussy!!!!
جزاك اللّٰه خيرا 💖
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Definitely.. a choice that will never affect the entire family… 🙈
The poor couple being tested again.. let’s see how they’ll fare…
Nani… sometimes I think she is stuck in a fantasy world – or she just thinks that Jameela is nothing like she really is…
Shukran sister.. ❤️
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Oh my word no no no
This is just 💔💔
When it rains, it doesnt pour. Becomes a flood for Mos and Hamza😭😭😬💔
Shukran for the amazingly emotional update
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💔💔
Shukran sister…
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Noo no no this can’t be happening😫 my whole stomach just sank this was so intense. There has to be some way. Was she really proposed to that idiot. Isn’t he had officially proposed on her wedding day and she turned him down🤔 i can’t remember.
I got a feeling rabia is the hidden person who’s giving info here. Please plesse please let some miracle happen. My heart won’t take this separation🥺
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Also Jazakallah Khair for still taking the time to post in the holidays❤❤ much much appreciated 🤗
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Yup, so a few posts before she says that they were planning a wedding … business kind of deal, but she also thought she loved him so she was ready to marry him…
And then she left him and he swooped in with the final props again…
Sometimes Haraam relationships do become a bit too complicated and be up hurting us even after we’ve left … 💔
Allah protect us.
Miracles are always possible… 💕
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Yessss! I remember now. Jazakallah 💗
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Aameen!
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I have no words. My heart breaking here for Mos & Hamza, they’ve been through so much in such a short space.. But such is life, we have been promised that we’ll be tested.. She can’t resort to divorce, that’s not the way.. She needs to turn to Istighfaar for the past, perhaps she hasn’t fully repented.. Allah Ta’ala is Most Forgiving & it’s His promise that Istighfaar will make a Way Out.. The post is much appreciated too.. Anxiously awaiting the next one.. Take care till then.
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Yes, they most certainly have 💔
Tests are part and parcel of building our Imaan…
That’s such a valid point, because truly, sometimes Allah is just giving us a nudge and a reminder that we need to turn to him.
Shukran dear sister… 💕
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Oh my Allah 💔💔
I have no words!
This story is so riveting…
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💔 may Allah heal all the broken hearts…
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Oh my Allah.. I think everytime I read a post from this story..I end up praying for the fictional characters whom I’ve come to like so much..
It’s wierd in a way.. please don’t let them be separated..
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My heart is breaking too..
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Sorry 💔💔
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No man.. Poor Mos can’t catch a break 💔
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Eish I know … 💔
InshaAllah next post will be out tmrw
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Eagerly awaiting
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It’s here, enjoy ❤️
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No no no
You can’t do this authoress
We will give you a choc 🍫 please don’t let this happen to Mos and Hamzah
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I will try my best okay? ❤️
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And thanks for the choc, I live for chocolate 💕💕
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