Reflections
Reclaiming Ramadan from hustle culture, metrics, and unrealistic expectations.
A needed reminder: Ramadan was revealed as a month of mercy, not a month of optimisation.
Over the years, Ramadan has slowly begun to resemble a productivity challenge. Qur’an goals are tracked like targets. Worship is measured in output. Rest is treated like a weakness.
While striving is part of our faith, turning Ramadan into a competition quietly drains its spirit. The pressure to maximise every minute can leave the heart rushed rather than softened.
When worship becomes performance
Many practising women enter Ramadan with sincere intentions. They want to improve, to grow, to draw closer to Allah.
But constant exposure to highly structured routines and public worship goals can turn sincerity into self pressure. Worship becomes something to prove, rather than something to return to.
Productivity culture does not belong in worship
Productivity culture values output, efficiency, and visible results. Worship, however, is built on sincerity, humility, and consistency.
A fast broken with patience. A prayer prayed with presence. A single du’a made with desperation. These do not show well on a checklist, but they carry immense weight with Allah.
Sit with this: Allah does not ask you how much you did. He asks how sincerely you turned to Him.
Why burnout harms consistency
Pushing yourself beyond capacity often leads to exhaustion. Exhaustion leads to resentment. Resentment slowly distances the heart from worship.
Ramadan is meant to build habits that last. A pace that collapses after the first week was never sustainable.
A healthier way to strive
Healthy striving feels grounded. It accounts for your responsibilities, your body, and your emotional capacity.
It allows room for rest. It accepts fluctuation. It prioritises presence over pressure.
Ask yourself: Is my Ramadan routine bringing me closer to Allah, or simply keeping me busy?
Redefining success this Ramadan
Success may look quieter than expected.
It may look like praying on time consistently. Like controlling your tongue when fasting tests your patience. Like choosing sleep so you can worship with presence. Like leaving a sin you have normalised.
A final reflection
Ramadan is not a challenge to win. It is an invitation to return.
When worship is done with sincerity and sustainability, it transforms the heart long after the month ends. May Allah grant us Ramadans that soften us, not exhaust us.