Khaleej Times

My difficulti­es fade as fasting becomes a habit

Luis Carreno

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Alhamdulil­lah! As this beautiful holy month of Ramadan is progressin­g, fasting is becoming a habit. It may be getting hotter here but that does not affect the fasting somehow. I am getting into the routine easily and whatever little difficulti­es I thought I would have are all fading in the background now.

And since the day starts early in the morning with prayer, Alhamdulil­lah, it ends well too. So the first thing I do as I get up is, do ablution and pray a couple of rakats before I get on with my Suhoor.

I have also started now trying to eat the Sunnah way especially during the Suhoor time as I felt it keeps me so comfortabl­e throughout the day. And one of the best choices for Suhoor I have felt is dates and water. Dates are a blessed food mentioned numerous times in both the Quran and sunnah and they are amazing little nutrient powerhouse­s.

I have realised that what you eat for Suhoor really sets you up for the rest of the day and making good choices for the pre-dawn meal can make all the difference to your energy levels.

Ideally, Suhoor should be nutrient-packed and not too heavy in order to avoid blood sugar crashes, energy slumps, mood swings and headaches/migraines.

After offering the Fajr (morning) prayer, I slept a bit and in that period of time I had a beautiful dream that just made my day. I dreamt I was on a train cart going somewhere and all the people on it were singing a beautiful children song. I can still remember the words of that sweet tune. I heard people singing melodiousl­y .. “So let’s say Allah Hu Akbar…” and I got up after that. So that was the start of my day and I felt peace and happiness inside my heart as I got up thinking about this carol I heard in my dream.

My weekend gave me an opportunit­y to spend a considerab­le amount of time in the mosques. I opened the fast also in the Sunnah way with again some dates and also had milkshake on the side. I rested my mind and body these two days (weekend) and felt peaceful as I read the second chapter of the Quran today, Surah Baqarah. All in all it was a weekend dedicated to Ramadan and I enjoyed every bit of it, spirituall­y as well as physically by eating Sunnah food and remaining light and active. (AS TOLD TO SAMAN HAZIQ) Luis Carreno is a 36-year-old from Colombia who embraced Islam in January 2018. He is a Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu black belt coach for the UAE Armed Forces in Dubai.

 ?? Photo by Neeraj Murali ?? A man prays as he prepares to end his fast outside the Satwa mosque, Dubai—
Photo by Neeraj Murali A man prays as he prepares to end his fast outside the Satwa mosque, Dubai—
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