How to Utilize Our Free Time
From the time man is born on this earth, his age begins to decrease gradually.
This means that each day that falls away from his age, is detached from the
calendar of his life like the pages that fall down one by one until the time
which the tree of his growth will be stripped out of its last leaves.
Indeed, our age decreases, not increases, as, in our estimation, it apparently
seems to do. The burning hours of age are like a candle dropping its melted
tears. What burns of it, warns of the approach of its end till it reaches the
moment at which it emits its last breath.
What is Age?
Age looks like a
temporal vessel, containing the days of our life. Its quality and the way it is
filled is in our hands, not in the hands of others. People differ; some fill it
up with honey, others fill it with poison, still others mix these together
while yet others, leave it empty.
Is it Possible to Leave the Vessel of Life Empty?
We doubt in this. Even
our free days spent in amusement and vanity fill the age vessel with sighs,
sorrows, and regrets in a Day called by Allah, the Almighty, “The Day of Sorrow and Regret.” It is a day in which all people are gathered in the
presence of the Lord of the Worlds – from Adam up to the last creature – in
order to be judged on how they spent “their lives” which is entrusted as a
deposit with them.
Did they spend it with
seriousness, striving, and performing righteous and good deeds? Or did they
spend it by doing vicious and bad actions that caused long and permanent sorrows
and regrets? Or did they mix a good deed with an evil deed and in their
actions, were they among the losers, like a businessman who spends all his life
in trading and at the end, finds himself bankrupt?!
The Importance of Time
If we look for the
best one who evaluates time for us, do we see other than the maker of time,
Himself, and is it not Allah, Exalted and Glory be He?!
Indeed, this delicate
division of moments, minutes, hours, days, weeks, months, and years, is just
like a cultivated field and the farmer is me or you. According to the endeavor
of each farmer, the harvest will be yielded. And it is during the time of
harvest that an active and diligent farmer will be pleased, and a lazy and
inactive farmer will be driven away. How beautifully Imam Ali (a.s.) describes
it: “This world is the plantation for
the Hereafter.”Whoever grows an apple, he will surely harvest an
apple. And whoever grows an onion, he will surely harvest an onion. And whoever
grows a flower, he will surely harvest a flower. And whoever grows a thorn, he
will surely harvest a thorn. And whoever grows laziness, he will surely harvest
regret.
Verily, Allah, the
Almighty is the One Who divides the dawn, afternoon, day and night in order to
draw our attention to the thing divided, is of great importance. These numerous
expressions regarding the measurement of time are nothing but small vessels
within the great vessel of age. Perhaps, the moment you are presently in, will
say farewell to you, and enter in the list of your account a reserved action
and maybe it leaves you a loan from that account. And who knows that one day
will come, for any of us, in which the chief of the bank will reject us and we
will leave, disappointed, because there is nothing in our account book!
On that day, it is
impossible to start again from the beginning because it is too late and we
missed the opportunity. Shall we be pleased to return bankrupt and blame
ourselves? Or shall we see working in order to add another fund and act
according to the slogan which says: “Save your white piaster for your black
(difficult) day”, which means: Keep your righteous deeds for a Day in which
wealth will not avail, nor sons, save him who comes to Allah with a sound
heart.
Surely we will not
find in the Qur’an an expression more eloquent than the following saying of
Allah:
“So, he who does
an atom-weight of good shall see it. And he who does an atom-weight of evil
shall see it.” Holy Qur’an (99: 7-8)
Men will be shown
their deeds in the Resurrection by being made to taste of their fruits, but
they can also see the good or evil of their actions in this life. Good and
evil, when practiced on a large scale, bring their reward or requital in this
life, as well. Note that the words here are “he who does”, and
thus, include both the Muslim and the non-Muslim. Even a non-Muslim who does an
atom’s weight of good will have his reward, and a Muslim who does an atom’s
weight of evil will be requited for it.
Then, some one may ask
us: How much is an atom’s weight on the scale of time? Is it a moment or less
than that? However it is considered, it is a unit of measure in its utmost
smallness, and this means that even the littlest deed of good to which one does
not pay attention to, will be fruitful during the time in which a flood will
overcome the people, and the smallest deed of evil, will be destructive but the
good doers are saved from it.
Surely, time is
Allah’s grace blessed on all people. It is the white papers on which they
record our deeds, be it good or evil, and people are responsible for it on the
Resurrection Day. In this regard, Allah’s Apostle, Muhammad (s.a.w.) says: “Not a foot of a servant (of Allah) on the
Resurrection Day, will move before he is asked about five things: ‘His age and
how he spent it, his youth and how he wore it out, his wealth and how he earned
it and on what he spent it and about his love towards us, Ahlul-Bait (the
Prophet’s household).’”
He (s.a.w.), also,
says:“Seize the opportunity of
five things before you lose these five: Your youth before your old age; your
health before your illness; your leisure before your occupation; your life
before your death and your riches before your poverty.” It is worthy of observation that the question of age
is repeated twice regarding age, in general, and about youth, in particular,
due to the importance of the stage of youth, as well as it being the stage of
striving, sacrificing and offering.
For instance, when a
student surely knows that a question will come on the next examination, he will
prepare himself for answering it, otherwise, he will lose a precious
opportunity which cannot be substituted, with anything else.
The question is about
Resurrection Day – clear and obvious - and the examination will certainly come:
What is your age andhow did you spend it, and what was your
youth and how did you wear it out? The question remains to be answered by each
of us.
Wasted Time and Useful Time
If we look at the
amount of time we spend uselessly and try to make a simple calculation as to
how many long hours go in vain either in nonsense chatter or in loitering along
the streets, or wandering in front of commercial shops or participating in
parties which have no limit and without knowing that we are committing “the
crimes of futility” against ourselves with the most precious of what Allah has
blessed us with, what will be the total?.
Just think of these
images, in which we live, and, which occur perhaps daily:
- A young man may take
his car or his father’s car, sometimes, accompanied by his friends, to drive
around the streets, squares, and roads without any aim and destination.
- A girl or girls may
wander for long hours – perhaps other than shopping – in front of shop windows
in hopes of desire.
- Young men may play
football for hours on end and even though eventually they quit, they repeat
playing once, twice and perhaps three times.
- Young men sit in
coffee houses smoking, chattering, backbiting and laughing loud.
- Others may stand in
long lines waiting to buy their needs or waiting for buses while casting their
naive looks here and there.
- Others who stay up
at night may play cards, or chess, or sit before computers for unlimited
periods or use the Internet to the extent of addiction without caring for the
time which they waste in this regard.
Is Play Forbidden? Who says this?
The
subject, here, does not concern the forbidding of a thing or its lawfulness. It
may be a thing lawful, but because it exceeds its proper bounds it is disliked
and dispraised. As Allah, Glory and Exalted be He, created all things of great
significance, it is essential that every thing in our life have a specific time,
otherwise, excessiveness, instead, can be invested in the affairs which are
important and useful. Therefore, it is said: “What a
difference there is between two kinds of actions. An act whose pleasure passes
away, but its distressful consequence remains, and the act whose hardship
passes away, but its reward stays.”
Then, try for one day
only to count your wasted time and, surely, you will be surprised at the
results.
While we read the
bewildering results, let us consider, for example, that there are prisoners who
wish to return to their free life to fill up every moment of their life with
science and action, and it is nothing but the feeling that their free time
passed away in vain.
And let us, also,
consider that there are some people who wish that their days were more than 24
hours and, if they could, would borrow time from those who do not care for
time.
Such people - the owners of
useful time -have times in which they rest, and, at the same time, they renew
their activity in order to continue their work, again, with a high spirit and
prosperity.
We can make use of
this opinion and consider that time takes its longevity or brevity from what we
fill it up with of deeds. A quick glance at the life of great men and their
success, reveals an important secret of their prosperity. That is the
investment of their time in the best way. Rarely will we find among them those
who waste their time in vain. The well-known inventor of electricity, ‘Edison’, is said to have never endured time, but, he used to swallow it up. He used to
work, constantly, as if he wanted to achieve in an hour what others achieved in
10 hours. He disliked being absent in solving one such practical question but,
it caused him to waste one week in the problem and was eventually futile.
It is known about
various great scholars that they used not to sleep at night, except a few
hours, for the purpose of making use of additional hours of their days. These
people are they who always remember the saying of the poet:
“The beating of man’s
heart tells him that life is but minutes and moments, therefore, keep these
memories for yourself after your death. Surely, memories, for man, are but the
lifetime of a moment.”
Organizing Time
Zaid used to complain
about the shortness of his time, and became surprised at his friends who did
many things like studying, practicing their hobbies and meeting their friends
even though their time was the same.
One day, he presented
this question to some of his friends. They told him: “The matter is clear.
Organize your time, so that it will seem to be more.”
For this reason, some hadiths
(Islamic traditions) have divided time into hours and an hour, here, means
time units and not sixty minutes. This means that there should be time for
every action. Imam Ali (a.s.) is quoted to have said:
“The believer’s
time has three units: The period when he is in communion with Allah; the period
when he manages his livelihood; and the period when he is free to enjoy what is
lawful and pleasant…” Other hadiths
add another unit and, that is, for visiting trustworthy friends who know
our shortcomings. Commenting on the period of enjoying what is lawful and
pleasant it can be said: In this period (of enjoyment), you will be able to
perform other deeds.
Though this division
gives man specific periods for his essential needs, it is not an inactive
prescription. It may happen that man’s needs become more numerous and varied,
but the aim at the division of time is to organize it in such a way that an
action does not extend over another action, or to use up all time while other
actions remain un performed or left half performed.
Therefore, striving
towards gaining one’s livelihood is required to meet his material needs;
approaching to Allah, through worshipping and glorification is required as a
spiritual need; visiting one’s friends is required as a social need; enjoying
what is lawful is required as psychological need; and besides these hours,
there should be another important period for seeking science and knowledge in
order to meet one’s theological and ideological needs.
What is important to
mention here is that there should be a balance between these units of time in a
way in which worldly actions should not cause us to forget the deeds relating
to the Hereafter. And the wise among us are the ones who make all our deeds an
obedience to Allah, the Almighty; even worldly actions. However, who sits
before a computer without previously deciding how much time he should spend in
that sitting, will surely find himself still sitting before its magic, small
screen, after many hours passed.
And he who lets the
doors of the meeting with his friend be wide open, will surely see that some
conversations lead yet to others, and the meeting which was supposed to be
finished in half an hour, lasts for two hours or more.
Indeed, organizing
time, as we learn from the schedules of prayer, the appointed times of fasting,
iftar (breaking of the fast) and the appointed days of pilgrimage (hajj),
introduce us to the following benefits:
1. The abundance of
time and blessings which were unknown before the organization of time.
2. It drives away from
us both disorganization and the confusion in which we live as a result of the
penetration of time and its negligence.
3. It gives us a
respected personality by our friends, companions and those surrounding us.
4. It makes us live in
the state of psychological contentment and spontaneous happiness in what we
have achieved.
5. It makes us control
time and not be controlled by time, itself.
A Work Schedule
Each of us is able to
prepare a sheet of paper for himself and in which he records the timetable for
his daily work. It is necessary to acknowledge the seriousness of observing the
articles of the schedule; otherwise, it will become mere ink on paper. This
method teaches us the following:
1. Time should be
organized in a such way as not to be scattered in digressions and forsaken
conclusions, and where one can be wholly engaged in a particular work which, as
a result, has an affect on the rest of the work.
2. The above mentioned
paper acts as a calendar which reminds us of the deeds which a wait us to be
performed without delay, because tomorrow will impose on us a list of other new
deeds, and a moment of our daily schedule will surely be affected on the
timetable of tomorrow.
3. It is possible to
schedule even preparatory time for each action. This may seem difficult because
it is impossible to estimate the time of some actions properly and exactly,
but, with the passing of days, it will become a beautiful habit with which one
gets used to.
4. There is no harm in
putting aside time we call “free” just for unexpected emergencies.
As Muslims, our
responsibility is not limited only to worldly deeds, and, therefore, our
Islamic schedule cannot be separated from our ordinary schedule except in some
obligations. Our time can be organized in the following way mentioned by one of
the supplications (du’as):
“…(Oh Allah) make us
prosperous today, tonight, and in all days to use good and reject evil, give
thanks for Your blessings, follow the Prophetic traditions, avoid innovations,
enjoin good and forbid evil, protect Islam, debase and humiliate falsehood,
assist and strengthen truth, guide those who go astray, help the oppressed, and
comprehend the regretful.”
Indeed, this schedule,
though it is full of righteous deeds and the rejecting of evil, is not
necessary to be a schedule for one day, rather, it is a typical Islamic day
which needs determination, practice, and prosperity and guidance from Allah,
the Exalted and the Almighty.
This schedule can be
divided into its positive and negative subjects:
First: Positive Subjects:
1. (Using of good):
It should not be only a sentimental trend inclining towards labour, rather, it
should be changed into an action which benefits others.
2. (Giving Thanks For Blessings): This means to reciprocate benevolence with
benevolence, kindness with kindness and good with good. He who does not thank
the creation (i.e. man), never thanks the Creator (Allah), and the best
practical thanks is “Give thanks, O
people of David!’ Holy Qur’an (34: 13)
3. (Following Prophetic Traditions): Because this is the right path brought by the Holy
Apostle, Muhammad (s.a.w.), who says: “Say:
If you love Allah, follow me: Allah will love you.” Holy Qur’an
(3: 31)
4. (Enjoining Good):
This because it is the way to increase the arena of doing good and the spreading
of reform and benevolence in a society, which may positively reflect on the
happiness of the society and its strength and welfare.
5. (Protecting Islam): We should defend Islam and protect its principles due to its being
the symbol of our dignity and the righteousness of our religion which
represents our existence and identity.
6. (Assisting and Strengthening Truth): To strengthen truth if it prevails so as to spread
it throughout the world even more, and to support it if it is threatened by
falsehood and oppression.
7. (Guiding the Strayers): To guide through different methods of guidance the one who goes
astray from the right path and to inform him his secure place if he deviated
his destination.
8. (Helping the Oppressed): This should be done by what Allah, the Most High,
has granted us of capabilities such as: Wealth or responsibility or sciences
because among the necessities of having belief in religion is to give
assistance to the needy. “So woe to
the praying ones, who are unmindful of their prayer! Who do (good) to be seen,
and refrain from acts of kindness!” Holy Qur’an (107: 4-7)
9. (Comprehending the Regretful): A poor man looks like a blind man who sees nothing
but that of meeting his own needs, and his regret will come by the fulfillment
of those needs.
Secondly: Negative Subjects:
1. (Rejecting Evil): To give up evil means opening the
way for goodness to be spread and evil to be straitened and decreased.
2. (Avoiding Innovations): Because innovation (bid’ah) means to insert something which
is not related to religion in the name of religion. It is a misrepresentation
of Divine instructions and Prophetic Traditions (sunnah) and invents
that which has not been said by Allah and His Apostle relating to religion, whereas,
religion, itself, is innocent of it.
3. (Forbidding What is Evil): This is done by any means be it by hand or by
tongue or by heart, so that the followers of evil should not feel compelled to
continue, where they might spread their abominations among the people.
One who observes this
schedule, both positive and negative, will find that there is a balance in the
movement of Muslim youth, demolishing evils and performing good deeds. In this
regard, a Hadith, describing a true believer, says:
“Goodness is
expected from him (a believer) and he is safe from evil.”
Free Time
First we ask this
question: Is there anything called free time?
We can surely say: No,
because man when he finishes a work, will be engaged in another. It may be less
or more important than before. Even sports, itself, is an unproductive work
though it is productive in its psychological output for a player.
Islam - as we
mentioned previously – gives man the time for which he refreshes and amuses
himself and his family and enjoys its pleasures and delights. It even gives
this time more value and importance, because it is a supporter of the periods
of work and worship.
But, our discussion
about free time is not that which gives man renewed energy, rather it is that a
wasted time in which the youth not only scorn their vital and great
responsibilities, but also, live in the state of useless, negative, and wanton
time.
Mostly, free time
falls into disorder when we waste our time and neglect its value, whereas, it
can be an opportunity for seeking science, or for learning some new skills, or
for correcting wrong conceptions, or for helping Allah’s creatures, or for
meeting the needs of a believer, or to be acquainted with the issues of the
Muslim world, or for developing what we have obtained of previous knowledge, or
to become acquainted with a new friend seeking Allah’s pleasure, or to
strengthen an old relationship with a friend, and so on. Even if an
unexploited time is considered out of the scope of age, because the real age is
the age of that farm which was previously mentioned in a Hadith, is it
wise for a man who owns a wide land arable for agriculture, to leave it
unplanted?!
In this regard, one
scientist says: I read more and if I become tired of reading, I take a rest by
reading. He explains this by saying: I incline to reading scientific books, but
when I feel exhausted of reading, I turn to read literary or history books in
order to ease the tiredness of scientific reading.
Look at those who are
around you. Do not you respect the one who stands before a shop waiting for his
turn, or at a station waiting for a bus, or in a clinic holding a book in his
hand and reading it?!
Do not you respect a
man going on his way remembering a poem which he memorized before, or a verse
of the Qur’an he does not want to forget, or repeats some glorifications which
increase and strengthen his relation with Allah, the Most High?!
Do not you show
respect for a person who holds in his pocket a small notebook in which he
records a proverb or a saying he read in a newspaper, or an information he got
by chance, or an important number he found here and there which helps him in
quoting what he says, or he records an idea which comes suddenly to his mind
and is afraid to miss or forget it?
Surely, telephones now
exist which can record messages, and wall secretaries are placed in front of
houses to be used by visitors to record their notes in case of not seeing the
owner of the house. These are clear evidences for the attention of the owner of
the house as to what has happened during his absence.
A person who daily
reads newspapers; follows newscasts and visits sites on the Internet or is
acquainted with what happens around himself in this ever-changing world, is a
man who is careful not to cast his time aside like a disregarded paper into a
wastebasket. He feels that he is cut off from the world if he does not keep up
on the movement of the world, and if his steady vigile is stopped, surely he
feels loneliness as if he has lost something precious.
The people of an
American town discovered that an illiterate woman learned how to read and write
late and without a teacher. When she was asked about this, she answered:
Indeed, I felt the loss of precious time that I had missed, therefore, I tried
to compensate for it and, thus, I used to eavesdrop and steal a look at my
small daughter while she was studying and, with her, I used to savour all her
lessons.
Thus, we should
eliminate the following expressions from the dictionary of our life:
- I missed the train!
- What is the use of
working now. Indeed, I have lost various opportunities, and chance always
opposes me.
- Many people preceded
me in that endeavor and I have no place, now.
- I tried and I
failed. There is no reason to repeat the same experiment…etc.
We should replace the
above mentioned expressions with the following: There is always time to work
before death.
But, regarding
“compensation of wasted time”; this term is not correct. Because wasted time
cannot be compensated, nor can it be delayed. Wishing the period of youth to
come back after passing away is a false desire which is captured only by poets
and there is no possibility to achieve it in reality. Nevertheless, it is
possible for youth to avoid additional negligence, and excessive loss by
regretting and utilizing what remains of their lives, and not to cause their
lives to be a plunder of play, levity and idle relaxation.
Through experiments,
it is proved that laziness, unemployment and leisure factors cause deviations
and corruption. In this respect, a poet says:
“Surely, youth,
spare time and luxury are causes of corruption for man and what corruption they
are.”
We should, also,
differentiate between spare time, in which there is no use, and a dedication to
review, self-criticize, and be alone with one’s self, or to take permission in
order to renew one’s activity. This is a part of work, not free time. It is
something desirable due to its being the time which distributes more abundance
to other times.
Utilizing Free Time
Leisure is defined by
those concerned as free time and in which one is not connected by the necessity
of achieving a specified goal. It is the time in which man frees himself from
any commitments and necessities of life, and spends it in any way he wishes.
Regarding students and youth, it includes the period of their summer and winter
holidays, week ends, time and permission out of their working hours, in
addition to free time secured by the era of modern technology.
The following are some
suggestions which include some means of utilizing free time, and we hope that
our young men and women will find in them an assistance to their empty hours:
1- Reading: It has been said that the importance of books has deteriorated during
the past two decades competition with other media such as: Radio, TV,
newspapers, computer, and the net work of information, but books still keep
their value because of the following reasons:
1. All other competitions
depend on them, and the most successful programs and investigational articles
take their knowledge from books them-selves.
2. The ability of
controlling the book, such as: Selecting it, or borrowing and copying it. It is
up to the reader’s taste, his desire and needs to control the kind of requested
book in any time and any place.
3. Using a book as a source
for writing, and as long as there are researches and studies, sources and
references will not someday be null and void. Even, we observe that various
CD’s disks, in reality, are archived books.
As long as a book has
all these values and its importance has decreased among students and youth to
the extent that they turn away from it, it was still the right of a poet to
say:
“I am the one who
exchanged books with friends, but, I found no friend but books.”
And we should not
forget that the profit we gain from the pleasure of reading and its advantage
cannot be truly appreciated except by those readers who are fond of books and
have established, them, a long companionship. If we miss this, it is because of
being overwhelmed by thesis and competitions, which we have mentioned before.
Among the best ways to fill leisure time is by diverse and useful reading. In
addition, there are some observations which help in deepening the understanding
of the usefulness of reading. They are:
1- To read what
fulfills our ideological, spiritual and psychological needs. We should not
force ourselves on to be against reading like a man who forces himself away
from food and we should not desert books on the plea that we lack the
dedication to reading, because once separation occurs, it is difficult to unite
it again.
2- Always keep your
pen with you while reading in order to take some notes on some concepts or
opinions which may help you later. You can, also, underline some important
concepts or mark them with a phosphorous pen so that you can review them easily
without the need to read the whole book.
3- Reading may open
for you, unexpected ideas in a book, so, do not miss them and write them down
immediately, because they may benefit you one day in your ideological,
cultural, and literary projects in the future.
4- It is better to
depend on cards of research in writing down your information including the name
of the source from which you cited it, the author’s name, the date of its
edition and the number of the page.
Nevertheless, reading
does not only to apply books, but also, includes newspapers, magazines and
journals and what is daily offered by newsstands. They present news and
information items about the different affairs and the fields of life of which
no young man or woman who wants to live fully their age can avoid. In this
regard, a Prophetic hadith says: “The
one who is well acquainted with the affairs of his time, is secure against
afflictions, conspiracies, and confusions.”
One of the fruits of
reading is that of writing. During leisure time, young men and women can
practice their hobbies, such as writing, be it an article or story, or poetry
and so on, and present them to people of experience. By this way, they can
improve their writing ability.
2-Attending
Lectures and Seminars:
One of the useful ways
to fill our free time is to become acquainted with cultural and scientific
weekly programs and literary gatherings. What is presented of lectures and seminars
can help us enrich our knowledge and develop our ability in dialogue, criticism
and diverse opinions.
And, if we participate
in putting forward a question to a lecturer or the participants in a seminar,
surely we will make use of it and benefit others as well. In this respect, a hadith
says: “Three are rewarded: The
questioner, the questioned and the listener of them,” and thus, our social and cultural personality
develops and thrives.
Our observation of the
way of asking a question, the way of dialogue, interposing and directing a
question, teach us the manner of dialogue and how to pay attention to points
which stir further discussions of subjects or problems.
It is better to take
our diary with us to write down the most prominent opinions introduced in a
lecture or a seminar so that we may keep it as a cultural subject which may
benefit us one day in time of need.
In these meetings and
sessions, we may, also, become acquainted with a great number of educated
people, writers, authors, and personalities who participate in such cultural,
ideological and literary activities.
3- Listening and
Watching:
The four mass media
(radio, T.V., cinema and theater) are not only means of play and amusement, but
also, they are instruments of education. An education through them may be
performed intentionally or unintentionally, i.e., it comes directly or
indirectly which obligates us to distinguish and diagnose it from audible and
visible items.
What is shown and
broadcasted through these media, such as, local subjects and other imported
programs, are not all useful for listening and watching; some are useful and
some are harmful; while yet others are poisonous.
Before these double
edged weapons, we should have a strong and intelligent sense in order to separate
the correct from wrong, and the well from the unwell, otherwise, we will be
victims of such informational schemes which are directed by specialized
authorities, biased and purposeful agencies and net works. And do not be
surprised if we know that there are educational, informational and social
scientists, and psychologists who present, for us, their audible and visible
goods covered by beautiful papers, but, in reality, they are harmful in Muslim
markets. They often aim at invading our houses because the barriers - by the
development of these means and their advancement – are indeed dissolved and
cause the information media to enter every house without asking permission.
These equipments,
developed very quickly and greatly in the form of astronautics, video tapes,
cassettes, and disks which are cheap and simply transported, but they are heavy
in presentation and burdens, and cannot be dominated by remote control. But,
we, as Muslims, must control them with our desires, education, cultural, social
and religious backgrounds which do not permit the watching of dissolute,
profligate and trite films because they do not address anything except sexual
and material desires and, sometimes, they intentionally aim at corrupting
morals, distorting concepts, and turning values upside down.
And because these
equipments are double-edged weapons i.e. they carry both evil and good inside
their propagations, it is necessary to use their good things and avoid their
evils.
An example of the
process of filling temporary leisure time would like the process of filling up
intestinal emptiness; is it wise to enter everything into our stomach for
allaying our hunger even if it is dirty, poisonous, dangerous and threatens our
health, and safety?!
As a result of this,
it is incumbent on us - onlookers and listeners - to safeguard, as much as
possible, our characteristics, identity and our cultural and religious
obligations. Therefore, we should judge and evaluate what we hear and what we
see according to our ideology, culture, education and experience, otherwise, we
will be turned into prisoners of these media which will lead us to dangerous
crossroads.
Submissive sitting,
for long hours before a T.V. motivates numbness and wasting of time and which
causes disorder in the routine of other daily programs and perhaps causes
ideological paralysis. Thus, it is recommended for each of us to distribute the
hours of his/her watching in a purposed and selective manner.
The psychologists
confirm that television – in itself- does not create the problems of aggression
and deviation, but, it is created by miseducation by one’s own family,
relatives and friends. So, aggressive children and youth choose aggressive
programs to support their former directions and television becomes a supporter
towards deviation, and violence.
And though these media
have numerous advantages which mostly meet each other, some researchers have
studied both advantages and disadvantages of television. The following are some
disadvantages that they diagnosed:
1.Killing time,
wasting age, and engaging both individuals and a nation (ummah) against
performing their significant responsibilities.
2.Transfering
irregular and deviated environments to our society, and imposing evil and
degraded moral patterns on people.
3. Building a corrupted culture in the minds of the
youth and showing the dissolute at the forefront of a society as if it is the
norm.
4. Misrepresenting the
contemporary affairs of the Muslims and demolishing of the obstacles that exist
between us (Muslims) and the enemies of our ummah, represented by the
Jewish Zionists.
But, still, we do
not deprive ourselves of useful radio and T.V. programs which include
scientific, cultural, political, literary, social, economical and health
programs, particularly those programs which present the problems and
afflictions from which our society suffers and which are discussed by experts,
specialists, and professionals.
4- The Computer
and Information Network:
When computers came
into existence, they not only filled up the free time of the youth, but also,
occupied their time completely to the extent that they have no associate nor
rival. Indeed, they exceeded all the means of entertainment and play before it.
A computer, in this respect, is like other media. It can be used for the
benefit of people or can be changed into a tool of corruption and destruction.
It is unjust for this
active and brilliant invention, which has numerous capabilities, to be used
only as a tool of entertainment and play. In it, there are programs prepared
for teaching accounting, business administration, and the principles of driving
a car, or learning grammar of a certain language. In addition to this, there
are various other services which are too numerous to mention them, like the
fields of typing, handwriting, designing, layout, drawing, painting and others.
And the programs on the internet are wider in their content regarding science,
information, politics, and culture, as well as, in different fields of life.
From the blue screen
of the computer man become educated by its high degree of flexibility, speed of
processing data and the capability of diverse coverage: Geographical,
theological, social, development of positive thinking, deepening of the concept
of participation, non-acceptance of intuitions (self-evident truth), negative
convincing and not surrendering to simplicity, all are blessings but at the
same time foster indignation. It is upon us to make use of such blessings in
the best way, otherwise, we will be afflicted with its indignation,
particularly regarding the imported games which bear, in their undisclosed
contents information and morals which differ from our Islamic morals and
customs.
Therefore, it is
obligatory for us to have spontaneous and supervisory over setting certain conditions
which should be observed in such games. Among them are: They should bear human
characteristics and have scientific value. They should be diversified and not
be only for entertainment. They should not create enmity among the players, nor
contradict the instructions of our religion, morals and customs.
However, setting long
hours in front of this equipment, which has severe temptation exceeds
television in its open and extended hours of sitting and which has made some
countries, like Sweden, to specify the age of permission for using such games.
They become concerned with the necessity of not introducing the young to the
temptations of these games for fear of their education and the specified time
in which they are allowed to use the computer for the sake of entertainment.
Indeed, the harm of
being addicted to the computer as a tool of entertainment is not less than
wasting time watching a well-known game of football or being engaged in
watching videos and television. Among the dangers of this invention, which has
become a member of our family, is the decreasing of our circle of friends or
social relations. The youth think that this invention has already achieved
their wish and they are in no need of friends, but, this becomes far from the
reality of a society and people.
Even the dialogue
sites of the network of the Internet cannot achieve the same advantages and
medical benefits which we gain from direct friendly meetings in face to face
visits.
We should, also, know
that even those feelings, and emotions and excitements which we get through the
computer screen cannot be a complete substitute for direct meetings which
contain warm feelings and continuity, activity and close acquaintance with
others.
Magnetized disks –
with the exception of their importance – will not replace books which are
considered our companion in everywhere; at home, in school, in the car, in the
airplane, on a ship, etc. The same thing concerning personal exchanges on the
network sites will not be a perfect substitute for direct friendly visits
whatever the attractive service or qualifications they add to it by its
producers and propagandists.
5- Learning
Skills:
Among the affairs
which become available and within the reach of most young men and women are
instructional, technical and handicraft institutions which offer practical
lessons in different skills, such as: Driving, programming, trade, smithery,
electricity, and handicrafts such as: Tailoring, domestic works, first aid,
learning foreign languages and others. These skills enable the youth to have a
better life and form a safe employment at their free time, particularly during
summer holidays. Learning one or more of these skills, not only fills one’s
time, but also, pours its practical advantage on the personality of young men
or women who will obtain fundamental knowledge in professions or handicrafts
which concern them at the present and in the future. These skills are regarded
among the distinctions and bases of superiority and are for the benefit of the one
who requests a work or a certain professions specially when there is a
competition. In this respect, a Prophetic saying (hadith) says: “Every man’s worth is in his attainments (what he does
proficiently)”
And having experience
in these fields benefits a young man or woman even outside the area of
specialization. For example, learning a foreign language is useful in having
dialogue with foreigners, reading books written in that language or having
correspondence in it, and, also, reading intern reports of drugs or doctor’s
prescriptions or brochures which are used to learn how to run equipments.
On the other hand,
among the best and the noblest skills to be learned by a Muslim young man and
woman is reading the Holy Qur’an, its recitation and memorizing a part or parts
of it or the whole Holy Qur’an if possible. And if there is no a special course
for learning and memorizing the Qur’an, it is better to use cassettes or laser
disks which enable one to learn the initial principles of reading the Holy
Qur’an and its recitation. Indeed, there are eminent reciters of the Qur’an
among the Muslim generations who depend on this way of memorizing it perfectly.
Finally, it is better
to know that any obtained skill needs practice and continuity in order to be
developed and perfected. In this regard, a proverb says: “Practice leads towards perfection.”
6- The Means of
Relaxations and Enter-tainment:
Since a long time ago,
Imam Ali (a.s.) said: “The hearts get disgusted as bodies get disgusted; so
look for beautiful, wise sayings for them.” ‘Tarif’ in Arabic means
‘newly acquired’ because every new thing has its special pleasure, flavor and
is a motive for the continuity of an action with great activity, unlike a
tedious manner which brings for man tiredness, weariness and alienation.
Have not you tried
that personally? When you change the direction in which you walk every day
towards your institution or your work center or when you change the decoration
of your room in which you live, even through simple technical touches like
changing the position of some furniture, or when you change your clothes though
they are cheap, do not you feel psychologically different for it. Simplicity in
itself may be an art which is taste.
Imam Ali (a.s.) is,
also, quoted to have said: “Hearts are
imbued with passion and the power of advancing and retreating. Therefore,
approach them for action at a time when they are passionate and when they are
in a mood for advancing, because if hearts are forced (to do a thing) they will
be blinded.” In this presentation, he
(a.s.) offers us a new way of amusement which began to be depended on not only
in schools and institutions, but also, in factories, industries and offices.
Experiments proved that a worker who amuses himself during work in one way or another
will surely attend to his work with an open and high spirit (mentally;
psychologically; spiritually) and as a result, it will be reflected, not only
on the quantity and quality of his production, but also, on his relationship
with his colleagues in his work environment.
Islam equalizes
between man’s needs and does not eliminate this human need. So, it is better to
give a part of our time to amusement whose procedures become diverse and
numerous. The following are some of them:
a- Sports Amusement: Its branches and colors are various and continuously
increasing. The most famous one is football which is useful to health;
psychologically, socially and bodily, and swimming and other kinds of
amusement.
b- Artistic
Amusement: Like practicing the
hobbies of painting, drawing, handwriting, sculpture, punching, and
handicrafts, such as: Sewing, embroidery, making flowers, decorating houses,
and the collecting of stamps.
c- Social Amusement: This includes exchanging visits which is among its
well-known procedures and of which Islam greatly encourages, correspondence,
calling each other by telephone, celebrating beautiful occasions, participating
in cooperative activities for the purpose of strengthening bounds of
relationship among the faithful, in addition to taking long and short trips
which remove most of the states of bodily, psychological and intellectual
tiredness, and exhaustion.
d- Tourist
Amusement: This includes paying
visits to sacred places, and beautiful archeological, historical and tourist areas
which give both psychological and cultural advantages.
It is worthy of our
observation that amusement – in all its forms – does not mean to escape from
the pressures of life, as some may think, but, it is a readiness and
preparedness to face it once more and not as described by others as the
discharging of additional energy which has no aim, rather, it is a useful and
safe investment of those powers at both levels; individuals and groups.
The following are some
conditions of amusement encouraged by Islam:
1. It should be free
from any corruption, harm, falsehood, wrong and forbiddance
2. It should be free
from any extravagance and pre-occupation which may waste time, all of it. It is
recommended that out of any amusement and investment of free time should arise
a particular or general advantage, because it is dislikable for a young man or
woman to be empty and unoccupied in either the action of this world or the
action of the next world.
On a very hot summer
day and in the city of Madinah, one of those who used to plot against Islam and
its leaders wanted to degrade Muhammad al-Baqir (a.s.), the grandson of Imam
Hussein bin Ali bin Abi Talib (a.s.), whom he saw working on his farm at the
height of midday and said: ‘You are an old man from the elders of the tribe of
Quraish and at this hour and under such circumstances, you are seeking worldly
gains. What if death comes upon you while you are in this condition?” The Imam
(a.s.) answered him: “O Allah! Should
death come to me in this state, it will come to me while I am doing something
pleasing to Allah, to spare myself begging from you and other people. I would
only fear death if it came to me while I was sinning against Allah?”!! Indeed, the Imam’s answer is a precious lesson which
has to be taken into consideration by the Muslim youth.
Sleeping and Staying up at Night
No doubt, sleep is a
natural need of man. Allah, the Glorified, granted us this glorious blessing in
having relaxation, and sleep during night hours in order to renew and revive
our activity and energy after being exhausted by the difficulties and the deeds
of the day. Without sleep, surely, we would have been destroyed by the
continuity of work in the day and night. Therefore, it is considered as means
of amusement for one’s self, and body, especially for those who work hard and
are greatly exhausted in their day.
But, it is noted that
some young people, male or female, may misuse – sometimes uninten-tionally –
these blessings. They stay up late at night and sleep late into the day on the
plea of having nothing to do or they say, to pass the night awake is beautiful,
so they kill their time with empty and talkative discourses. In this regard, a
Prophetic hadith says: “Allah
dislikes a young man / woman who sleeps much,” i.e., the one who increases sleeping for long hours
exceeds the natural need of man.
On one side, some
covetous people make use of their time and reduce their time of sleep,
depending on the proverb which says “Whoever
seeks superiority, should spend his nights (in doing some activities)”, and are satisfied with the least amount of hours of
sleep. On the other side, some young men or women yield themselves to long
hours of sleep without paying attention to their age and how it passes in this
slumber to the extent that their amount of sleep exceeds their working hours
and production.
And passing the night awake,
if it does not benefit man and those around him; nor there is worship in it,
nor seeking knowledge, nor having a productive action in it, will surely have,
not only, bad consequences on the youth, but also, its disadvantages will
become more than its advantages.
The principles of
balance – which was mentioned earlier – is useful for application and
implementation of any affair in life, because Islam is the religion of both
non-extravagance and non-negligence, i.e., it does not confirm either
prodigality or negligence in any thing. In this regard, the Almighty, Allah
says: “And thus We made you a nation
justly balanced.” (Holy Qur’an (2: 143)
A Final Word
This is the glass of
our age before us – Allah’s deposit upon our neck – so, how will we get it
back?
Is it full of good or
is it full of evil? Is it empty and unoccupied? Or is it smashed, broken into
pieces and spent on the pavements of play, entertainment, fun, relaxation,
chatter and the meetings of unemployment?
Shall we use what has
been said by some scholars who make use of their time more than others when
they say: “We want to leave our impressions on time, and never let it leave its
impressions on us.”
One scholar expressed
this in his saying: “The regret of great men reminds us to elevate our life and
when we leave this world, we will leave behind the results of our mistakes on
the sands of time.”
The following are a
collection of proverbs that help us to achieve the above statements:
- “If you sleep on
flowers in your youth, surely you will sleep on thorns in your old age.”
- “If one is lazy
in his youthfulness, surely, he will be a beggar in his oldness.”
- “All the flowers
of the future are a result of the seeds which you plant today.”
- “Day and night
have an effect upon you, therefore, do have an effect on them.”
- “Do not fear a
slow advancement, but, beware of standing immobile.”
- “The present
world is the plantation for the Hereafter.”
- “Time is like a
sword, if you do not cut it, it will cut you.”
- “Unemployment is
the mother of all vices.”
- “The opportunity
of a lazy man, languishes with him.”
- “To miss an
opportunity brings about grief.”
- “This world is a
passage, while the next world is the place of dwelling; so, take your passage
(as a way by performing good deeds) to your abode.”
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