don’t be too hard on yourself for not wanting to wear hijab so early in your journey. I am a revert as well…been muslim for 11 years. I wore it for 4 years basically right at the beginning and then took it off. Its been 7 years and I haven’t put it back on, although I am contemplating it for next year. there are many people who are born muslim and they don’t wear it for decades. But I think its so important to focus on doing what is fard and focusing on our internal spiritual practice instead of the outside. and eventually the outside will reflect the inside inshAllah. Praying 5x a day, reading Quran, making Dua, fasting etc. dhikr as well. and lately my husband and I have been reading the translation together and him praying more has actually helped me so much. I feel more motivated when he doesn’t miss his prayers and he is using his tesbih beads, he goes to friday prayer and then comes home and it reflects so well on our household. He doesn’t force me to do anything…he just leads by example. We don’t have any living children, but him leading in this way is still important.
Hamdallah.👍
I love the idea of adding islamic values to the stories you tell. how sweet 🥰
Yes definitely! It’s important to teach kids about Islam and its values.
❤
You are best
don’t be too hard on yourself for not wanting to wear hijab so early in your journey. I am a revert as well…been muslim for 11 years. I wore it for 4 years basically right at the beginning and then took it off. Its been 7 years and I haven’t put it back on, although I am contemplating it for next year. there are many people who are born muslim and they don’t wear it for decades. But I think its so important to focus on doing what is fard and focusing on our internal spiritual practice instead of the outside. and eventually the outside will reflect the inside inshAllah. Praying 5x a day, reading Quran, making Dua, fasting etc. dhikr as well. and lately my husband and I have been reading the translation together and him praying more has actually helped me so much. I feel more motivated when he doesn’t miss his prayers and he is using his tesbih beads, he goes to friday prayer and then comes home and it reflects so well on our household. He doesn’t force me to do anything…he just leads by example. We don’t have any living children, but him leading in this way is still important.
It’s interesting to see the Islamic influence on British culture.
I’m Australian actually! But my husband is from Pakistan hence the Islamic influence on names
If u don’t mind me asking how would you react if your kids change their religion when they’re older
Obviously it can happen however me and my husband hope that our kids will love their religion and want to continue to follow it.