Skip to main content

4 Keys to Overcoming Loss of Any Kind

Often challenges pop-up, holding us back from achieving great dreams and great visions we want to fulfill. We get stuck, slowed down on our journey to fulfilling our potential and living life with purpose and passion. This past year has been an immense example of being sidelined for nearly everyone.

These challenges to achieving our dreams often come in the form of some sort of loss.  In the Quran, God tells us:

“By time, indeed man is in a state of loss. Except those who believe, and do good and enjoin each other on the truth, and enjoin each other to be patient.” (Surat Al-Asr, Qur’an 103)

And we are also told:

“We will certainly test you with something of fear and hunger, and loss of wealth and lives and fruits (earnings); but give glad tidings to the persevering and patient” (2:155).

These verses explain that human beings are naturally going to experience some sort of loss throughout the course of life. Some loss of heath, some loss of wealth, some loss of loved ones, some loss of loved things. Whether the loss be a career or a dream or in some extreme cases safety and freedom. 

Arguably, if these losses are not managed properly, they can amount to the ultimate loss. We can lose a strong connection with Allah, happiness in an after-life, and peace and contentment in this life.

Loss is Inevitable

So the question is, how can we overcome these losses that are inevitable? How can we carry on with our lives to fulfill our ultimate purpose and maintain a strong connection with Allah?

How can we heal those wounds, overcoming those worries so we can live life to the fullest? Don’t we want to be ourselves, doing what we can to make a positive difference in the world?

First, it helps to remember that loss is a natural part of life. Everything is transient, is passing, and is temporary.  We can experience great sadness and pain but we can also experience great joy and relief.  Allah (SWT) tells us once again in Surat Al – Najm – that:

“And that to your Lord is the finality, and that it is He who makes [one] laugh and weep and that it is He who causes death and gives life.”

(Quran 53:42-44).

Our health, wealth, and loved ones are all blessings and gifts. They belong to Allah and He lends them to us for some time. We just tend to forget that they are gifts. Ending up attached to the gift and not as attached and thankful to the One Who blessed us with the gift, even when He, in His Infinite Mercy, chooses to take the gift away. And we know that for the believer, being tested or being blessed, are opportunities for patience and gratitude.

Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) was reported to have said:

“Amazing is the affair of the believer, verily all of his affair is good and this is not for no one except the believer. If something of good/happiness befalls him he is grateful and that is good for him. If something of harm befalls him he is patient and that is good for him.”

(Muslim)

And once again we’re guided in Surat Al-Asr to the way out of this state of loss. And how to overcome and cope with it, moving on to more contentment and success by the will of Allah.

These keys that are mentioned in the verses cited above are:

1) Belief in Allah

2) Doing Good

3) Enjoining each other to truth

4) Enjoining each other to patience

1 – First Key to Overcoming Loss

Our belief in Allah and in His Prophet (PBUH) and in His book (The Quran) allows us to understand that we were given this life as an opportunity, a chance, a way to achieve happiness both now and later, in an after life, if we can observe those keys to salvation. We are told in the Quran:

“He’s the One who has created death and life, so He may test you which of you is best in deeds. And He is that All-Mighty, the Oft-Forgiving.”

(Quran 67:2)

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

List of Times and Places Where Dua is Accepted

A short reminder regarding the recommended times of dua . And I think what you need to know here is that the recommended times of dua or recommended things that can cause your dua to be accepted, can be divided into two sort of large groups: Am I Good Enough to Make Dua for Myself? Situations where your dua is accepted. Times where your dua is accepted So I’m going to very briefly mention them one after the other as much as possible. As for situations where your dua has been accepted: – The person who has been wronged or oppressed . – A person who finds themselves in severe difficulty after a calamity has struck. – The person who is traveling. – Someone who is fasting. – The one who is reciting the Quran or has just recited the Quran – Someone who is performing Hajj or Umrah or jihad. – The one who is making dua for someone in their absence . Because we know that when you make dua for someone in his absence an angel says: “ Ameen and to you”. – A person...

Derechos de Las Mujeres en Islam

Durante el Tiempo del Profeta (la paz sea con él) Veamos cómo fueron tratadas las mujeres de todo el mundo durante la época del Profeta (la paz sea con él). En la Europa del siglo VIII, la religión principal era el catolicismo y durante este tiempo debatían si las mujeres tenían alma. Dijeron que las mujeres eran impuras y que no tenían derecho a la herencia. A las mujeres tampoco se les permitía tocar la Biblia. No era como ahora en el Islam, donde ellas no pueden tocar el Corán durante la menstruación, pero a las mujeres en la Europa del siglo VIII nunca se les permitió tocar la Biblia. En China e India, fueron quemadas vivas cuando murieron sus maridos. En Arabia Saudita practicaron infanticidio femenino en el que, si nacía una niña, la enterrarían viva. Si el marido de una mujer muere, un miembro de su familia se unirá a ella para demostrar que ahora es de su propiedad. Mujeres en el Islam Con el Islam llegó una nueva era para las mujeres. En el Islam, las mujeres tienen la...

Ghuraba (The Strangers): Nasheed with English Subtitles

Islam began as something strange, and it shall return to being something strange, so give glad tidings the strangers. (Sahih Muslim 145) This famous nasheed has many versions; this one is from Muhammad al-Salman and has the subtitles in English embedded. [We are] strangers and we do not bow the foreheads to anyone besides Allah  […] Transliteration to help in the pronounciation:  Ghurabaa’ wa li ghairillaahi laa nahnil jibaa Aisha Stacey  wrote in an article for Aboutislam.net : “I think that many of you would agree that being Muslim in the 21st century makes you well acquainted with being strange. It might even be a metaphor for random, as in you have been randomly selected. […] many converts to Islam will tell you about feeling as if they were strangers, before finding Islam. They will speak of feeling that they belonged somewhere else that their lives were just slightly off center. They often speak about a vague sense of knowing they were not like everyone else...