You've Been Called Judgmental for This. But Islam Calls It Something Else Entirely. hero artwork

You've Been Called Judgmental for This. But Islam Calls It Something Else Entirely.

Sacred Seasons Of Early Years Parenting In Islam ·
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Notes

Welcome to Sacred Seasons.

You have been called judgmental. You have been called the haram police. You have been told to mind your business, to stop being so rigid, to just let people live.

And somewhere along the way, you started to wonder if they were right.

This episode is for the Muslim parent who has been slowly talked out of their convictions. Who softened things they should not have softened. Who stayed quiet in a moment they knew, in their gut, they should have spoken.

Because here is what I need you to hear before we go any further.

You are not judgmental. You are obligated.

I am breaking down exactly what Islam says about judgment, why commanding good and forbidding evil is not a personality trait but a communal duty, what happens to your child's Islamic identity when the adults around them model silence, and how to speak up in a way that carries the character of the Prophet, peace be upon him, not the energy of the comment section.

IN THIS EPISODE:

[1:00] The pattern I have been watching for eight years and why it gets worse every Ramadan

[4:00] The three types of people who respond when Islam meets popular culture — and which one is costing your community the most

[8:30] The two worlds we live in simultaneously and why Islam draws a hard line between them

[12:00] The hadith of Usamah ibn Zayd — did you tear open his heart — and what it actually means for how we judge each other

[16:00] Amr bil-Ma'ruf wa Nahi anil-Munkar: why this is a communal obligation, not a personality type, and what Allah says it makes you

[20:00] The Nasihah hadith and why the Prophet said the entire religion is sincere advice — to each other, not just to scholars

[23:30] The sixth right your fellow Muslim has over you and what it means that silence withholds it

[27:00] The weakest of faith — what the Prophet actually meant and why staying quiet to keep the peace puts you at the floor

[30:30] Why how you speak matters as much as that you speak — and what it looks like to advise with the character of the Prophet, not the dawah bros

[34:00] The Ikhtilaf line — which matters are yours to speak on and which ones are not your battleground

[37:30] What your children are actually learning when they watch you stay silent to avoid the label

[41:00] The one question to ask yourself before you go quiet — and the one thing I want you to visualize when the noise gets loud

[44:00] Why your Islamic identity is the most powerful parenting curriculum your child will ever receive


RESOURCES:

New Workshop: Shifting the Islamic Parenting Paradigm. Click here.

Watch: Why Muslim Moms Keep Burning Out (And What Actually Breaks the Cycle) Click here.

Join the waitlist for Parenting By Divine Design: Click here. [Opening soon]


ABOUT SACRED SEASONS:

In a world of curated feeds and quick fixes, the sacred reality of motherhood often gets buried under pressure, perfectionism, and parenting hacks that miss the mark. Sacred Seasons brings things back to what truly matters: raising ourselves and righteous children through a life grounded in purpose, identity, and connection with Allah.

Hosted by fellow Muslim mom and parenting educator Eman Ahmed, this podcast isn't here to sugarcoat your struggles or hand you surface-level advice. Instead, we take a deep dive into what it really means to parent through the lens of Islam, where your worship, identity, and motherhood are not separate roles, but deeply intertwined.

Sacred Seasons is more than just a podcast. It's a quiet rebellion against performative parenting and a return to parenting that is rooted in emaan, led by identity, and built for the akhirah.

If this episode resonated with you, please subscribe and leave a review/Feedback. Your reviews help other Muslim mothers find this podcast.


CONNECT WITH ME:

Instagram: @emansedcorner YouTube: @emansedcorner Substack: emansedcorner.substack.com

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