Description
In this episode, I sat down with my friend and brother in faith, Jonathan Abdus-Samad Nadeau, for a deep conversation on what it truly means to make religion real. With Ramadan as our backdrop, we explored how Islam isn’t just about outward practices—praying, fasting, attending lectures—but about embodying surrender on the inside. Without this inner submission, our faith risks becoming hollow, disconnected from its purpose.
We spoke about the two dimensions of Islam: the external, which deals with acts of worship, and the internal, which calls us to master the self—our thoughts, emotions, and reactions. As I’ve witnessed time and again, a person can outwardly practice Islam yet still struggle in their personal life if they haven’t developed self-awareness and control. Our conversation centered on this gap and how we can begin to bridge it.
Jonathan shared insights from his background in meditation and spiritual practice, emphasizing the difference between knowing something in the mind and embodying it in reality. We often mistake thinking about change for actually changing. True transformation requires stillness, patience, and repetition—especially in the moments we’re triggered or challenged.
We both returned to the concept of patience, not as passivity, but as the ability to sit with discomfort without reacting. That’s where real growth happens. It’s not about eliminating emotions like anger or fear, but learning how to respond instead of being ruled by them. We explored how emotional reactivity often stems from identifying with the mind, and how freedom comes from creating space between stimulus and response.
I reflected on a personal experience during a hijra journey between Mecca and Medina, where physical pain taught me that surrendering to discomfort actually eases it. That lesson carries into every aspect of life—resistance creates suffering, while acceptance invites peace.
We closed by discussing meditation as a tool for cultivating inner stillness and discipline. It’s not about escaping or achieving something, but simply learning to be—sitting quietly, observing, letting go. It’s through this daily practice that we begin to discipline the self, embody the essence of Islam, and ultimately return to the Divine Presence of Allah Almighty.
This is what it means to make the religion real—moving from form to essence, from surface to depth, from performance to presence.
For those looking to go deeper, I created the Ramadan Success Program to support a more holistic experience of the sacred month, and the Islamic Meditation Program as a practical way to cultivate the inner stillness that anchors real faith.
Chapters
00:00 | The Outer and Inner Dimensions of IslamWe open with a reflection on the dual nature of Islam: outward obedience and inward surrender, and the need to integrate both for a complete spiritual path.
02:31 | Illusions of Practice and the Need for EmbodimentJonathan discusses how spiritual growth requires more than intellectual understanding—it demands embodied experience and real transformation.
07:11 | Making Religion Real: Where It CountsWe explore how faith must be lived in personal life, especially in relationships, where inner growth is truly tested and revealed.
11:28 | Stillness as the Foundation for Self-ControlWe highlight the role of patience and stillness as tools for observing and regulating emotional reactivity.
18:33 | Thoughts, Emotions, and the Illusion of SelfThe conversation turns to the origins of emotions and how disidentifying from thoughts is key to spiritual freedom.
23:03 | Observing Emotions Without Acting on ThemJonathan shares how we can train ourselves to sit with difficult emotions and sensations, breaking the cycle of reactivity.
33:43 | The Power of Acceptance Through PainA personal story from the hijra journey illustrates how surrendering to discomfort dissolves resistance and transforms pain.