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Sunday, 15 March 2020

Dunia akhir zaman

My point of view,

Based on listen, observe and assumption.

Everything that happens has a cause and effect. Look around you—what seems normal today might have been unthinkable 30 years ago. Practices that once were frowned upon are now common, simply because society accepted them.

Take mercury, for example. It is a dangerous chemical, something humans should avoid at all costs. Yet it is still used—sometimes in medicine, sometimes in beauty products—because some people care more about the immediate results than the long-term effects.

This is how the world works: we accept small consequences for the things we want now. But for bigger desires, the cumulative effect may shape generations to come, often without us realizing it.

Think about the concept of akhir zaman—the “end times.” Causes have effects, and sometimes we can trace them clearly:

  • AIDS emerged after the era of sexual freedom.

  • Obesity rose alongside the consumption of junk food and sweets.

  • Hypertension followed decades of overwork and stress.

  • And now, viruses emerge in increasingly interconnected, vulnerable populations.

I don’t know everything. I don’t even know much. But I observe, listen, compare, classify, and clarify. I try to weigh probability over precaution and aim for precision in understanding the world.

This year, I’ve noticed something unsettling: the weather. It feels hotter than ever, even in my home country that I’ve known for 27 years. The jungles, the plants, the rivers—they’re beautiful, but the heat is undeniable. It’s a small reminder that the world is changing.

Depression is everywhere. Students are stressed. Workers are overburdened. Mothers and fathers carry unseen pressure. Time seems insufficient—24 hours is never enough. Why? Because we want too much:

  • “I want this now!”

  • “I want to be happy, I need more money!”

  • “I want to change the world!”

  • “I want to be perfect!”

We chase endless desires and forget the cause and effect. We forget the consequences of our actions.

For Muslims, it’s a time to reflect: have we grown united or divided? Look at Palestine. When we stray from our fitrah, our natural origin and energy, we become weak in the face of uncertainty. At the very least, remain grounded—pray five times a day, connect with your core energy, and let it guide you.

Don’t live in a screen. Don’t live in your phone. Don’t live in the internet. You are alive—here, outside. Live your life fully. Spread kindness. Spark positive energy. Be a wise person.

A wise person is more than intellectual. A wise person heals at the root, stabilizes the energy, and brings solutions without disturbing others. That is the ultimate power.

There’s so much more to share. Slowly, bit by bit, it will all connect:

  • Human to human.

  • Energy to energy.

  • Cause to effect.

One day, InsyaAllah, it will all make sense.

The theory is mine. The practice is borrowed.

Until the next idea,
Sayonara.

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