You’re Not Broken. You’re Just Carrying Too Much.
The Weary Heart #39
There is a particular kind of tiredness that we’re all quite familiar with by now that sleep does not cure. You wake up having rested, yet something inside you still feels heavy. Not sure what to make of it. But just heavy enough to slow your thoughts, dull your enthusiasm, and make the smallest responsibilities feel strangely demanding.
The thing is, it’s not like you stopped showing up to work, stopped functioning at home. Because you do. But somewhere along the way, you began to wonder if this constant weight means something is wrong with you or is something else that’s off.
I know many people who quickly assume that if they are struggling, it must be because they are weak, ungrateful, or spiritually “deficient”. That if they were doing things “properly”, they would not feel this way. So they carry on hoping the feeling will disappear, or blaming themselves when it does not.
Over time, that blame hardens into a belief: I must be broken.
But what if you are not broken at all.
Life has a way of piling weight onto the heart and mind slowly. Rarely all at once.
A disappointment here.
An unresolved conversation there.
A period where you had to be strong because no one else could be.
Responsibilities you did not ask for.
Losses you never fully grieved.
Expectations you internalised because letting people down felt worse than exhausting yourself to the max.
None of these things are dramatic on their own. But together, over time, they accumulate.
You learn to live with it. You normalise the tension. You tell yourself this is just adulthood. Just responsibility. The price of being reliable.
And because you are still functioning, you dismiss the ache as something insignificant. Yet deep down, you sense that something within you is wearing thin.
Allah describes the human heart with remarkable honesty. He does not portray us as limitless or invincible. He reminds us instead of our fragility, our emotional capacity, and our need for divine care. “Allah does not burden a soul beyond what it can bear” (Surah Al-Baqarah, 2:286). This verse is often quoted to encourage endurance, but it also carries a quieter truth: Allah acknowledges that burdens exist, and that they are felt.
One of the most damaging myths we absorb, especially in religious spaces, is that pain must always have a clear moral cause. That if something hurts, it must be because we sinned, failed, or did not try hard enough. Over time, this turns normal human struggle into unnecessary self-condemnation.
We ask, “what’s wrong with me?”
Even the Prophet ﷺ, the most beloved of Allah, experienced periods where the weight of life pressed heavily upon his heart. After the loss of Khadijah رضي الله عنها, the passing of Abu Talib, and the cruelty he faced in Ta’if, the Prophet ﷺ was not reprimanded for weakness. He was not told to simply endure more. Instead, Allah honoured him with the journey of Isra’ and Mi‘raj (which Muslims commemorated this Rajab), a divine gift meant to comfort and strengthen his heart.
This tells us something crucial.
Sometimes, through pain is where Allah draws nearer.
Ramadan approaches us every year not as a test of spiritual performance, but as an invitation to honesty. Before the fasting, night prayers, personal goals and resolutions. Ramadan asks us a simpler question: What are you bringing with you into this month?
Many people enter Ramadan hoping it will erase their pain. That fasting will somehow silence the thoughts they have avoided. That their ibadah will instantly repair what has been hurting for years.
But when that does not happen immediately, disappointment sets in. Guilt follows. They assume they are doing Ramadan “wrong”.
But healing has never been instant, and Ramadan was never meant to be rushed.
True healing begins when you stop fighting the fact that you are tired, and start listening to what that tiredness is telling you. It is asking for gentleness, and some space, some room to breathe.
There is sincerity in saying, “Ya Allah, I am tired.”
Emotional and mental wounds don’t bleed, but they linger. And because they are invisible, we often feel undeserving of care.
Yet Allah is not moved only by visible pain. He knows exactly what weighs on your chest when no one else sees it.
The Prophet ﷺ said, “No fatigue, nor disease, nor sorrow, nor sadness, nor hurt, nor distress befalls a Muslim, even if it were the prick he receives from a thorn, but that Allah expiates some of his sins for that” (Bukhari and Muslim). This hadith is meant to dignify the pain we suffer through. To remind us that nothing endured sincerely is wasted, even when it feels small or unacknowledged.
As Ramadan draws closer, many people focus on preparing schedules and targets.
How many juz’.
How many nights of qiyam.
How many habits to fix.
How many people to feed for iftar.
Friends, these intentions are beautiful. There’s nothing wrong with them. But preparation of the heart matters just as much as preparation of the calendar and KPIs.
Healing does not begin with fixing.
It begins with recognising.
Allah is Al-Jabbar, the One who restores what has been broken. But restoration requires honesty. You do not present your wounds to Allah because He does not know them. You present them because you are finally ready to stop pretending they do not exist.
Remember, you are a human, who is navigating weight in a world that rarely stops to ask how you are doing. And Allah, in His mercy, continues to invite you back not when you are fixed, but when you are wounded and honest.
Perhaps this Ramadan is not about doing more.
Perhaps it is about laying some of the weight down. Guilt, sadness, betrayal, failure.
And perhaps healing does not begin when the pain disappears, but when you finally believe that carrying pain does not disqualify you at all from Allah’s closeness and love.
30 days to Ramadan,
MW
PS: Would love to meet you at my upcoming events:
Singapore: Allah Hears You
Kuala Lumpur: Ramadan Reminders & For The Tired Souls




The guilt, the shame, the feeling of being undeserving and tired 😢 Telling myself for so long that there must be something wrong with me. Another great sharing ustaz, and it came at a good timing.
جزاك الله خيرا