Lately, I feel like I’m being hit from every direction.
And I ask Allah for forgiveness, because sometimes I wonder if part of this heaviness is my own doing. Perhaps I have allowed distance to grow between myself and Him. I still pray, I still try to keep up with my obligations and extra acts of worship, but I know in my heart it is not the same closeness I once had.
I miss the version of me that sat quietly listening to lectures, that read Qur’an more often, that kept regular adzkar, that turned toward Allah not only in hardship but in ease.
I pray He helps me find my way back to that place. I am tired, more tired than I know how to explain. Tired of feeling like I am not good enough, even when deep down I know I am capable of becoming better. I know I have potential. I know I am able to learn, to grow, to become knowledgeable enough to truly help others. I want that deeply. I want to enjoy studying again the way I once did. I want to build a meaningful career. I want to make good money, not for luxury, but to ease burdens, to provide, and to give back.
Yet focusing feels so hard. My mind is occupied by a million things at once. And perhaps that is what makes this phase of life feel so strange, so heavy in ways no one prepares you for.
You are nearing thirty, standing in that uncertain space where adulthood begins to feel painfully real. Your parents grow older with each passing day, and suddenly time feels terrifyingly short. You want to give back. You want to make them happy while you still can.
Career-wise, you feel like you are still standing at the bottom of the mountain.
Love feels uncertain too. You hope to find someone, but sometimes waiting becomes exhausting. Loneliness grows quietly in the spaces between busy days.
Living far away makes it harder. Friends your age are building families, sharing daily life with people they love, while you return home alone, only to prepare yourself for another day of work, another routine, another quiet evening.
I know this is how many people live. I know I still have so much to be grateful for. And I truly am grateful. I am not angry at life. I hold no bitterness toward anyone. I simply write because writing helps me breathe. Still, there are worries that sit heavily on my chest.
Lately, I catch myself thinking, I can’t believe I am in this position, where we worry so much about money. Life didn’t always feel like this. There was a time when things felt easier, more stable, more secure. We were not burdened by this constant weight of calculating every expense, holding back, and worrying about whether we can afford what should have been simple necessities.
But my parents never really thought much about retirement. Not in a way that protects them now. And slowly, quietly, without anyone saying it out loud, it feels like that responsibility has fallen onto me.
My mother is getting older, yet she still washes clothes by hand because we struggle even to buy a washing machine. My father worries about expenses. I understand him, but watching her carry so much breaks my heart.
I help where I can, but I often feel alone carrying these thoughts. And in the quiet hours, unseen by anyone, tears find their way down my face. Not because I am ungrateful. Not because I blame anyone. But because some burdens are simply heavy, and some fears are difficult to carry in silence.
And that realization makes me deeply grateful for them, more grateful than words can express.
There are bills, responsibilities, my parents’ supplements, expenses for the cats, promises I have made to keep. Saving money feels nearly impossible. Sometimes it feels like I am running endlessly through a tunnel, praying for light at the end of it.
I pray Allah increases my strength.
And above all, my tawakkul.
I pray that one day, when I look back on this chapter, I will understand why I had to walk through it.
And I pray that chapter ends with ease.