Welcome to ProductiveMuslim.com

ProductiveMuslim.com is a brand that inspires young Muslims to become Productive through Islam & applying the latest productivity techniques. It's an effort to revive Productivity in our Ummah through lessons extracted from the Quran, Seerah, and the history of the Islamic Civilization! Join us, Discuss with us, and share with us your thoughts, let us all work together towards a ProductiveUmmah!

Recent Comments/Updates

Productive Muslim on Facebook

This Week's Friday Naseeha

ProductiveMuslim Projects

 

« Website Review: MuslimGrower.com | Main | Cool E-mails vs. Professional E-mails »

Waking up for Fajr: How to? (Part 1)

After my initial post about how waking up for fajr prayer boosts your productivity, here's the intro to the how post: how do you wake up for fajr? And I don't mean wake up for a day or two, but how do you keep waking up for fajr, constantly, everyday,  without fail.

There's loads & loads of websites online giving you tips and advice on how to wake up early. But our focus is not on worldly tips (which should be taken by all means, part of tying the camel ;)), our focus is on the spiritual means.

My dear brothers/sisters, every day when you read Surat Al-Fatiha, at least 17 times a day, you recite the verse "You Alone we Worship, and You Alone we Seek Help from": You want to worship Allah? "Yes!" You need His help then. You want to wake up for Fajr? "Yes please!" Guess what, you need Allah. You cannot, I repeat, cannot, wake up for fajr without Allah's help. Now ask yourself the question, what can I do to show Allah that I truly and utterly want to wake up for fajr?!

Have you ever had days when you're about to go to sleep, and you have this deep feeling that you'll definitely wake up for fajr? And have you ever had days when you know for certain that you'll oversleep? Imagine the two scenarios, which I'm sure some of us have gone through: 

Scenario 1: You feel high with Eman, you've prayed your witr, read some Quran, and even though you've got 2 hours to sleep till fajr, you're certain you'll wake up because you've set your mind, heart and body to make sure you wake up. In fact, sometimes you keep on waking in the middle of the night thinking it's fajr time out of fear that you're going to miss it. If you haven't experienced this, think of a time when you had to catch an early flight or a bus/train, and think of how your mind, heart and body were switched on, and it doesn't matter what time you slept, you'll wake up.

Scenario 2: There are days when deep down you really don't want to wake up, you hope that you "oversleep" so you feel less guilty about it, and Allah may have mercy upon you and still wake you up, and that's when the battle with the snooze alarm starts and the classic shaytaan trick "just 5 more minutes..." begins.

How do we maintain scenario one everyday? That's the topic of my Part 2 inshaAllah.

 

 

PrintView Printer Friendly Version

EmailEmail Article to Friend

References (1)

References allow you to track sources for this article, as well as articles that were written in response to this article.
  • Response
    As the world wide web continues to cumulate 'There are no comments for this journal entry. To create a new comment sources, we'll strive to deliver them to you.

Reader Comments (2)

Assalamu alaikum from Uzbekistan.

I was looking for sources that look at self-improvement from Islamic perspective. Eventhough, our Deen is based on constant self-improvement, with the matter of time, we lost that spirit of constant greater jihhad, alas. Thanks for your efforts to bring that spirit back to our ummah.

January 3, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterSardor

@Sardor - JazakAllah Khair for your support! Please do send me any suggestions, topics you wish to see covered.

January 3, 2009 | Registered CommenterProductiveMuslim

PostPost a New Comment

Enter your information below to add a new comment.

My response is on my own website »
Author Email (optional):
Author URL (optional):
Post:
 
Some HTML allowed: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <code> <em> <i> <strike> <strong>