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How a Muslim mother of a child with disabilities struggles through grief?
I’m a mother. I’m blessed with six precious children. I’m
an average Muslim striving to do my best to earn Allah’s Pleasure. Allah has prepared me for unimaginable hardship as He guided
me through grief. The day I met my fifth child I saw a miracle. It was
the day when my life changed. That day I received a gift from Allah, the Giver
of Gifts, as He gave me a chance to get closer to Him and to earn His blessing,
mercy and guidance.
It was 2 o’clock in the morning when I was woken by pain
in my tummy. I woke my husband up and began packing up my bag. I was 36 weeks pregnant
with my fifth baby. At 3 am my tummy started feeling so tight and hard. I
remember warm tears coming from my eyes as I tried so hard to bear the pain. By
3:15 am we were at the hospital. When the midwife checked my baby, she said
that her heart beat was weakening. Immediately, I felt worried when she said, “Quick,
we have to save the baby!” as we were rushed to the theatre to do an emergency
caesarean.
At 4 am, 9 years ago, my baby was born with a severe
brain injury. She was born without any heart-beat. The medical team did CPR on
her. They informed my husband soon after she was born. A few minutes after, a
nurse came again and told him that our baby lost her heart beats. “What do you
mean?” my confused husband asked the nurse. Alhamdulillah, Allah grant back her
heart-beat after the second CPR. Both of us were taken to the ICU. When I woke
up, my husband who was by my side uttered the news that no mother would hope to
hear. Allahu Akbar! I was shocked and shaking. I felt nothing. “Please tell me
that this is not real.”
The doctor revealed that I had placental abruption,
meaning my placenta separated from my uterus wall before my baby was born. They
found bleeding and blood clot in my uterus. There hasn’t been any explanation
as to why and how this happen. My pregnancy was normal and I had no
complications prior to giving birth.
I remember the day I met my baby for the very first
time. It was a day after she was born. I was still in the ICU when the nurses
pushed me on my hospital bed to the NICU. I couldn’t bear my eyes when I saw
her. No mother could bear this painful realization that her baby has brain
injury. As I touched her, I found myself bargaining, “O Allah, I’ll do anything
for You, if You take this away from her.” I remember tears filled my eyes as I grieved
when the doctor answered my question that there is no cure for brain injury. The
reality hit me when I realize that the injury made my
daughter lost her intellect. It was so hard for me to understand because what
make us human superior is the gift of intellect Allah bestow on us. I felt distressed
when I found out that she also lost her sight and hearing. The reality hit me
at full force when she turned three months old, when her eyes wouldn’t follow
me and she could not smile at me. At six months old, I felt devastated when she
could not even move, roll, crawl or sit. Every time she didn’t hit her
milestones, it brings back my grief and made my heart empty just like the heart
of Prophet Musa’s mother. When the pain is too much to bear, you fell nothing
anymore. All my hopes and desires for her bright future are shattered before
they even begin. For more than a year my husband believed that there was
nothing wrong with her and she will only get better. He convinced me that the
doctor was wrong.
I learnt that this is decreed from Allah only after I
understand the true meaning of Inna lillahi wa inna illaihi rajiun.
"Truly! To Allah we belong and truly, to Him we shall return. I learnt
that Allah, the best of all planners, tests me through my daughter’s brain
injury. He tests me if I would still strive hard for His sake by being patient and
staying truthful to Him. What more would you want when Allah
promised to be with the patient one? He also promises us that the reward of
being patient is Jannah. I understand that with this hardship He has
something better for us, even if I didn’t see what it is immediately.
The hardest thing I have faced is to digest the fact
that she has multiple disabilities. She cannot use her own mouth for eating and
let alone for smiling. She cannot see me her own mother who bore her before she
was born and cared her until this day. She cannot call me “mama” like the rest
of my children call me. She cannot hear me saying “I love you” like me always say to her and her siblings. She will always depend on me to provide constant
love, care and support for the rest of her life as she could never take care of
herself. Imagine having a baby where you have to do everything for her. Now,
imagine taking care of that baby for 9 years and many more to come. La hawla wa
la quwwata illaa billah. There is no might or power except with Allah. I admit
it that I’m powerless and only Allah can strengthen my heart to get me through
all of this.
I learnt that this trial was really a mercy from
Allah, the Most Merciful, when I rediscover my purpose of life. This hardship
reminds me that my only purpose in life is to worship Allah, alone. He guides
me to the right path by making me staying true to Him and not giving up my
faith, even in the time of great hardship. Allah guides
me to be like Prophet Yaakub alahi salam, as he only complain about his grief
and sorrow to Him, the All-Hearing, the All-Knower. I believe that only He can help me get through all of this.
When I saw a little girl like her, playing and running
at the park, it made me sad to think that my daughter could never come to me
running or hug me, let alone kiss me. I hate it when I can’t help myself from
comparing her with other children at her age. What would you feel when you
realize that your daughter would be bound in the wheelchair for the rest of her
life? My heart hurts when I think about my fear of what my daughter can’t do
but others can.
Alhamdulillah, it was a blessing from Allah that I
learnt to swallow my anger and fear by allowing myself to be patient with her
condition and understand that it was such a great loss only if I don’t pass the
test that Allah put me through. I learnt to overlook the worldly dreams I had
of my daughter. I dream of her with images of Jannah. I look forward for the day when we are reunited and she will run towards me, hug me and kiss me at the gates of Jannah. I hope I will pass the test. I hope it opens up the way for my
entrance to Jannah.
Alhamdulillah, I am pleased with Allah’s decree
and accept His divine intervention to have granted me a daughter with a severe brain
injury. I accept her multiple disabilities and appreciate her being a person of
Jannah. I understand that if I ask Allah to cure her it would mean I will take
away her privilege that make her sinless and not be accountable in the Day of
Judgement. By Allah’s mercy, I’m able to take the extent of her condition without
pain and sadness as I realize that I am blessed with a person of Jannah under
my care. I would still revisit my grief but my heart is at peace with what is
coming. With Allah’s guidance, I’ve been through an unimaginable hardship by
being patient and staying true to Him. I would still experience many challenges
but I understand that Allah, the Most Merciful, the Wise, can only tests me
according to what I can handle. Maybe you won’t understand it but you will
agree that with Allah’s blessing, He has guided me through His designed process
of grief. Allahu Akbar! Miraculously, it transformed my life as I rediscover my
purpose of life, to worship Him alone. If this is the only way for me to return
to Allah, every second and every moment of hardship I was with her is worth it.
Comments
Mashallah such a wonderful blog. Sister your writing and words have brought so many feelings to my heart, You really have been blessed with such a gift from Allah. You are also helping others with this blog to bring understanding and help to others to understand this disability. May Allah continue to bless your precious daughter, your children you and all your family. Ameen.
Thank you so much for reading the Lightnur and leaving kind words. I am glad this blog helps others understand disability. Please share the post sister. Ameen to the dua. Insha Allah. I will see you again.