Every Day Is War, You Can't Relax - Part 2
Or more wisdom?
"If there are many devils… then you must fight harder".
Sounds logical.
But is it?
If there are more enemies than you… what does constant fighting produce?
Victory?
No.
Collapse.
If twenty devils speak, and you try to shout louder than all twenty every day…you will lose your voice before they lose theirs…if they will, at all.
More activity is not always strength.
Sometimes it is wasted motion.
Like someone swinging a sword at shadows until his arms shake.
Fatigue is not bravery.
Allow to bring the words of al-Albānī again:We move along this path like a turtle — slow… painfully slow
This line alone dismantles the fantasy of constant warfare.
Because the path of knowledge was never meant to be dramatic.
It was meant to be durable.
What does that alarmist language produce?
What does it quietly create inside people?
The answer is: Identity inflation.
"You are in a war every day, you can't relax".
That will be their constant state now, and that's the result of unmeasured speech.
No discipline…no knowledge…no patience, and now he is a "fighter".
Fighters like noise.
Students like silence.
Which one survives longer?
You already know the answer.
More devils in the world does not mean more frantic effort.
It means: More careful effort.
Less shouting, and more structuring.
Less reacting, and more building.
Less movement, and more direction.
Otherwise, you burn fuel… and go nowhere.
Like spinning wheels in mud.
Like a hamster in a wheel.
Lots of noise.
No distance.
The Hidden Test
Every idea should be tested by what it produces.
Ask: Does this produce endurance…or exhaustion?
If it produces exhaustion, it is probably theatrical strength.
Not real strength.
Theatrical strength cannot survive the long road.
Summary
The problem with the "war every day, no relaxing" mentality isn't just tone.
It's architecture.
It turns life into permanent emergency mode.
It confuses activity with effectiveness.
It produces burnout instead of endurance.
It encourages noise instead of formation.
It replaces steady progress with dramatic exhaustion.
It ignores the model of slow, deliberate growth taught by the scholars.
And the alternative isn't softness.
It is durability.
Go back to your normal momentum, relax, sip some coffee, drill those ideas and concepts, practice them, teach them.
Learn, understand, understand more, understand some more, read again, test, practice, understand more, realize you don't actually understand, learn more, get grounded.
This path is long, and drama has no place here.