ALAM Psychotherapy & Consulting

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ALAM Psychotherapy & Consulting Registered Psychotherapist in Ontario, Canada.

Psychotherapist (RP, MA) • Doctoral Candidate
Nervous System Regulation • Healing Trauma • Somatic • Faith-integrated • Online Therapy
↓ 1:1 Therapy ↓

http://linktr.ee/therapy.with.samira

You feel guilty for feeling overwhelmed.You feel ashamed of your fear.You feel afraid your tears mean your īmān is weak....
10/12/2025

You feel guilty for feeling overwhelmed.
You feel ashamed of your fear.
You feel afraid your tears mean your īmān is weak.

But what if none of that is from Islam?

What if it’s what culture taught you… not what Allah asked of you?

Many of us were raised to hide our emotions.

To silence grief.
To fear softness.
To confuse survival with righteousness.

But when you look closely at the Qur’an, Allah shows us something very different.

Mūsā (AS) admitted he was afraid.
Ya‘qūb (AS) wept until he lost his sight.
Ibrāhīm (AS) asked Allah to reassure his heart.
Zakariyyā (AS) quietly called out to his Lord in need.
And the Prophet ﷺ grieved with tenderness, love, and humanity.

If you grew up in a home where emotions were minimized or shamed, your body may still carry that weight.

Your nervous system learned to survive, not to feel safe.

But healing begins with re-learning what Allah actually asks of you.

Islam does not ask you to reject your humanity.
It teaches you how to honour it.

Your sadness isn’t failure.
Your fear isn’t lack of faith.
Your tears aren’t something to hide.
Your softness isn’t shameful.

Culture may dismiss your feelings.
But Islam dignifies them.

As you go through these slides, notice what softens.
Notice what feels seen.
Notice what you were told that was never truly Islamic to begin with.

You’re unlearning.
You’re returning.
You’re healing.

Every emotion you feel has a place with Him.

Nothing is too small, too heavy, or too messy to bring back to Allah.

Your emotions were never a sign of weakness.
Returning your pain to Him is not weakness.
It is worship.

If this resonated, I wrote something for you.

A free guide, trauma-informed and faith-integrated, to help you calm your nervous system. Comment “GUIDE” and I’ll send you the link.

To work 1-1 with me in therapy, book through the link in bio.

— With gratitude,
Samira















Feeling ashamed for needing reassurance is so common, especially if you grew up in a home where your emotions were brush...
09/12/2025

Feeling ashamed for needing reassurance is so common, especially if you grew up in a home where your emotions were brushed away, minimized, or treated like an inconvenience.

Your body learned to shrink itself, to say sorry for existing, to apologize for needing softness.

But in our tradition, repeated reassurance is not a weakness. It is mercy.

In the Qur’an, Allah reassures His servants again and again.

Think of Prophet Ibrāhīm عليه السلام.
When he asked Allah to show him how He brings the dead to life, Allah asked him, “Do you not believe?”
And Ibrāhīm replied, “Yes, but so my heart can feel reassured.” (Qur’an 2:260).

Allah did not shame him.
He granted him the reassurance he asked for.

His request was seen, accepted, and responded to with compassion.

Over and over in the Qur’an, Allah reassures His servants with reminders that He is with them, He protects them, He strengthens them, and He supports those who trust Him.

These verses are repeated because human beings need reassurance, not just once, but again and again.

This is how divine compassion works.

In trauma-informed therapy, we talk about how the nervous system asks for safety through co-regulation.

When you feel overwhelmed, your system seeks a steadying presence.

That isn’t neediness.
It is biology.

It is how Allah designed the human body to return to calm.

Your need for reassurance is not a flaw.

It is a sign that your heart wants grounding, connection, and safety.

Healing does not mean you never need reassurance.

Healing means you stop shaming yourself for it.

To work 1-1 with me in therapy, book through the link in bio.

Follow .with.samira for more.

Like, comment, and share with someone who needs to hear this.

If this hit home, you’ll love my newsletter. Comment ‘MORE’ to get the link.

— With gratitude,
Samira















Lately you’ve been feeling that quiet heaviness. You’re making du‘ā, you’re trying to stay patient, but part of you feel...
08/12/2025

Lately you’ve been feeling that quiet heaviness.

You’re making du‘ā, you’re trying to stay patient, but part of you feels unsure… wondering why it hasn’t happened yet, wondering if you’re doing something wrong.

Sometimes your du‘ā takes time.

Not because Allah is delaying you, but because your nervous system is still learning how to feel safe enough to receive what He has already written for you.

In trauma-informed therapy we talk about how the body holds fear, tension, and old survival responses.

When you’ve spent years in unpredictability or emotional neglect, your nervous system may not know how to rest into safety.

Even blessings can feel overwhelming when your body is still wired for threat.

And yet, look at the story of Hajar عليها السلام.

She ran between Safa and Marwah not because she doubted Allah, but because her body was in a state of urgency.

It was through that movement that Allah opened the well of Zamzam.

Her internal fear didn’t block the blessing.

Allah’s timing was already written.

But He also strengthened her heart through the process so she could receive the mercy that was coming.

Your journey might be similar.

Sometimes Allah gives you the time and space for your heart, body, and mind to soften into safety so when the blessing arrives, you don’t sabotage it, shrink from it, or fear it.

You receive it with steadiness.

A gentle reminder for today:
Your du‘ā is never ignored.
Your delay is never punishment.
And your healing is part of your preparation.

To work 1-1 with me in therapy, book through the link in bio.

Follow .with.samira for more.

Like, comment, and share with someone who needs this reminder.

If this hit home, you’ll love my newsletter. Comment ‘MORE’ to get the link.

— With gratitude,
Samira

Some days your heart feels so heavy you don’t even recognize yourself anymore. You’re trying to hold it together, trying...
07/12/2025

Some days your heart feels so heavy you don’t even recognize yourself anymore.

You’re trying to hold it together, trying to trust Allah, but your body is tired and your mind feels overwhelmed.

If that’s where you are right now, you’re not alone.

When Maryam ʿalayhā as salām faced the pains of childbirth, the Qur’an tells us she cried out, “I wish I had died before this and been forgotten, completely unseen”. Surah Maryam 19:23.

This moment reminds us of something many Muslims were never taught.

Feeling overwhelmed does not disqualify you from Allah’s love.

Deep distress does not cancel your iman.

Your nervous system has limits and Allah already knows every one of them.

In trauma-informed therapy, we talk about how the body can move into shutdown or panic when it feels alone with something too heavy.

This isn’t weakness.
It’s physiology.
It’s your system saying, “I’m carrying more than I can hold.”

And our tradition honors this truth.
The Qur’an does not shame Maryam for her words.

Allah immediately comforts her, providing water, nourishment, reassurance, and relief.

He meets her in her pain before asking anything of her.

Your overwhelm is not a failure.
It’s a signal.

A signal to slow down.
A signal to seek support.
A signal to let Allah carry what you cannot.

And the One who comforted Maryam ʿalayhā as salām sees you, too.

Follow .with.samira for more.

To work 1-1 with me in therapy, book through the link in bio.

If this hit home, you’ll love my newsletter. Comment ‘more’ to get the link.

— With gratitude,
Samira

Some days your heart feels heavier than your body can hold. You try to stay strong, but inside you feel tired, stretched...
06/12/2025

Some days your heart feels heavier than your body can hold.

You try to stay strong, but inside you feel tired, stretched, or afraid of breaking.

Allah tells us about Yaʿqūb عليه السلام, that “grief turned his eyes white” (Qur’an 12:84).

His sorrow was so deep it changed his body.
And yet, Allah honored him.

Allah never told يعقوب عليه السلام to stop grieving.
He only reminded him that He is near.

His grief was never seen as weak.
Never viewed as a lack of إِيمَان.

Your sadness is not a failure of faith.
Your tears do not mean you are doing life wrong.
Your grief is a sign that you cared, that you loved, that something mattered to you.

In trauma-informed therapy, we talk about how the body holds sadness like weight.

It shows up as chest tightness, exhaustion, worry, or emotional slow-downs.

These responses aren’t signs of a weak soul.
They’re signs that your nervous system is trying to help you make sense of loss.

And our tradition reflects that truth.

Yaʿqūb عليه السلام grieved.
Maryam عليها السلام cried alone under a palm tree.
Musa عليه السلام felt fear when he fled.

These are some of the most beloved servants of Allah.

Your emotions do not take you away from Allah.
Often, they bring you closer.

Grief becomes lighter when you stop judging it and start letting it move.

Like, comment, and share with someone who needs to hear this.

Follow .with.samira for more.

To work 1-1 with me in therapy, book through the link in bio.

If this hit home, you’ll love my newsletter.
Comment ‘MORE’ to get the link.

— With gratitude,
Samira

Lately your heart feels tired in a way that even rest can’t reach. Your body holds stress you can’t explain. Your mind f...
05/12/2025

Lately your heart feels tired in a way that even rest can’t reach.

Your body holds stress you can’t explain.
Your mind feels pulled in a hundred directions.
And you keep wondering why something as simple as reciting the Qur’an brings you a calm that nothing else can.

Here’s the truth most of us were never taught.

There is a science behind your sakīnah.

When you recite the Qur’an slowly, your vagus nerve becomes activated.

This nerve is your body’s built-in regulation system.

It shifts you out of survival mode and into safety, sending signals of calm to your heart, your breath, and your muscles.

The drawn-out vowels, rhythmic tone, tajwīd rules, and gentle vibration in your chest all work together to soothe your nervous system.

Even modern research shows that slow vocal vibration lowers cortisol, improves emotional regulation, and increases parasympathetic (calming) activity.

And our dīn taught this long before science did.

Remember how Allah describes the Qur’an as shifā’ and rahmah.
Healing and mercy.
Not just for your soul, but for your body.

Your body’s responses are not spiritual failures.
They are signals.

This is why even imperfect recitation carries healing.
You don’t need perfect tajwīd.
You don’t need a beautiful voice.
You just need presence.

Your nervous system responds to sincerity, rhythm, and breath, not perfection.

Your healing doesn’t have to be complicated.

Pick up the Qur’an.
Recite slowly.

Let your body feel the mercy in every āyah.

If this resonated, I created something for you.
A free grounding guide through a trauma-informed and faith-integrated lens to help you settle your nervous system and return to calm with Allah’s remembrance.
Comment “guide” below and I’ll send it to you.

Follow .with.samira for more.

To work 1-1 with me in therapy, book through the link in bio.

— With gratitude,
Samira

Lately your heart feels tired in a way that even rest can’t reach. Your body holds stress you can’t explain. Your mind f...
05/12/2025

Lately your heart feels tired in a way that even rest can’t reach.

Your body holds stress you can’t explain.
Your mind feels pulled in a hundred directions.

And you keep wondering why something as simple as reciting the Qur’an brings you a calm that nothing else can.

Here’s the truth most of us were never taught.

There is a science behind your tranquility.

When you recite the Qur’an slowly, your vagus nerve becomes activated.

This nerve is your body’s built-in regulation system.

It shifts you out of survival mode and into safety, sending signals of calm to your heart, your breath, and your muscles.

The drawn-out vowels, rhythmic tone, tajwīd rules, and gentle vibration in your chest all work together to soothe your nervous system.

Even modern research shows that slow vocal vibration lowers cortisol, improves emotional regulation, and increases parasympathetic (calming) activity.

And our dīn taught this long before science did.

Remember how Allah describes the Qur’an as shifā’ and rahmah.

Healing and mercy.

Not just for your soul, but for your body.

Your body’s responses are not spiritual failures.
They are signals.

This is why even imperfect recitation carries healing.

You don’t need perfect tajwīd.
You don’t need a beautiful voice.
You just need presence.

Your nervous system responds to sincerity, rhythm, and breath, not perfection.

Your healing doesn’t have to be complicated.

Pick up the Qur’an.
Recite slowly.
Let your body feel the mercy from every āyah.

If this resonated, I created something for you.
A free grounding guide through a trauma-informed and faith-integrated lens to help you settle your nervous system and return to calm with Allah’s remembrance.

Comment “GUIDE” below and I’ll send it to you.

Follow .with.samira for more.

To work 1-1 with me in therapy, book through the link in bio.

— With gratitude,
Samira

You don’t need to pretend you’re okay to have tawakkul.Sometimes your chest feels tight, your heart trembles, and your m...
04/12/2025

You don’t need to pretend you’re okay to have tawakkul.

Sometimes your chest feels tight, your heart trembles, and your mind won’t settle.

That doesn’t mean you’ve failed in trusting Allah.

Tawakkul is not emotional suppression.

It is not silencing your pain or forcing yourself into toxic positivity.

Prophet Ya‘qub عليه السلام cried for years after losing his son Yusuf السلام ‎عليه, yet the Qur’an describes him as someone who practiced sabrun jameel… a beautiful patience (Qur’an 12:18).

His tears were real and so was his trust in Allah.

When your body feels shaky, it doesn’t mean your īmān is weak.

It means your nervous system is asking for safety.

Tawakkul means:
• Allowing yourself to feel.
• Taking the steps within your control.
• Then handing over your trembling heart to the One who holds it.

Here’s a gentle practice:
Place your hand over your chest, inhale deeply, and on the exhale whisper: hasbunAllahu wa ni‘mal wakeel (حَسْبُنَا اللَّهُ وَنِعْمَ الْوَكِيلُ).

Tawakkul is giving safety to your soul by remembering Allah.

And whoever relies upon Allah then He is sufficient for him (Qur’an 65:3).

Remind yourself you don’t need to hold it all alone.

You have Allah.

And He is Al-Wakeel, the Best Guardian.

Follow .with.samira for more.

To work 1-1 with me in therapy, book your free consultation through the link in bio.

If this hit home, you’ll love my newsletter. Comment ‘more’ to get the link.

— With gratitude,
Samira

You might be feeling confused, tired, or quietly grieving a shift you didn’t choose. A friendship changed, a relationshi...
04/12/2025

You might be feeling confused, tired, or quietly grieving a shift you didn’t choose.

A friendship changed, a relationship ended, a door closed… and part of your heart is asking why it had to happen this way.

When something ends, your nervous system often reacts before your mind understands what happened.
You might feel tightness in your chest, heaviness in your stomach, or a sense of danger even when you’re not actually unsafe.

This is your body remembering old losses, not necessarily responding to the present moment.

In trauma-informed therapy, we talk about how the body links endings with threat, abandonment, or fear based on past experiences.

So your first reaction is not proof that something bad happened, it is a survival response from an older version of you who once felt unprotected.

Our tradition honours this truth.

Think about the story of Hājar عليها السلام when she was left in the desert with her infant son Ismā‘īl.

From the outside, it looked like an ending.
It looked like abandonment.

Yet Allah was not distancing her from goodness.

He was moving her toward a new beginning she couldn’t see.

The spring of Zamzam came in a moment of fear, not comfort.

Her ending was actually Allah returning her to strength she didn’t know she carried.

Sometimes Allah closes a chapter because staying in that chapter would pull you away from yourself.

Sometimes He removes what distracts you so you can hear your own heart again.

Sometimes He returns you to solitude so He can return you to Him.

Your ending is not a punishment.

It might be protection.
It might be redirection.
It might be a return.

To work 1-1 with me in therapy, book through the link in bio.

Follow .with.samira for more.

If this hit home, you’ll love my newsletter. Comment ‘MORE’ to get the link.

— With gratitude,
Samira

Feeling like a burden can make your chest feel tight, your throat heavy, and your mind tense with quiet shame. You tell ...
03/12/2025

Feeling like a burden can make your chest feel tight, your throat heavy, and your mind tense with quiet shame.

You tell yourself to hold it together because you don’t want to trouble anyone.

You hide your pain, not because you want to, but because your body learned that being “too much” is unsafe.

But here’s the truth your nervous system never learned.

Allah never asked you to carry what breaks you alone.

In the Qur’an, when Maryam عليه السلام felt overwhelmed under the palm tree, she cried out in distress.

She didn’t hide her pain.
She didn’t pretend to be strong.
Allah responded with comfort, provision, and reassurance.

Her moment of distress wasn’t a failure.
It was an opening.

Trauma teaches you to hold everything in.
Faith teaches you to bring everything to Allah.

Your body’s stress responses are not signs of weakness.

They are signals.

Tight chest means your system is bracing for danger.
Shaking means your body is releasing what hurt you.
Exhaustion means you’ve been carrying more than you were meant to.

Turning to Allah with that weight is not a burden.

It is worship.
It is tawakkul.
It is nervous system regulation through surrender.

Try this simple practice today:
Place your hand on your chest, inhale slowly through your nose, and quietly say,
Ya Allah, You know the heaviness I can’t put into words.
Guide me.
Help me.
Strengthen me.

Let your body soften as you breathe out.

Let your heart remember that the One who sees you is never tired of you.

Your pain is safe with Allah.
You are never too much for Him.

Like, comment, and share with someone who needs to hear this.

Follow .with.samira for more.

To work 1-1 with me in therapy, book through the link in bio.

If this hit home, you’ll love my newsletter. Comment ‘more’ to get the link.

— With gratitude,
Samira

You feel scared when your body shakes, and a quiet part of you wonders if it means your īmān is slipping. This fear sits...
02/12/2025

You feel scared when your body shakes, and a quiet part of you wonders if it means your īmān is slipping.

This fear sits heavy.
It makes you feel ashamed of reactions you can’t control.

But the truth is gentler than what your mind tells you.

Your anxiety isn’t low īmān.
It’s your nervous system remembering old danger.
Allah knows the story behind the shaking.

In trauma-informed therapy, we talk about how the body stores experiences it has not yet felt safe enough to process.

The trembling you feel, the tight chest, the racing heart, the sudden panic… these are not spiritual failures. They are survival responses.

Your nervous system is doing exactly what it was designed to do.

Protect you.
Alert you.
Signal that something feels familiar to an old wound.

And in Islam, your emotions are never hidden from Allah.

In Sūrat Tāhā (20:67), Allah tells us:
“Mūsā felt a fear within himself.”

This happened after the magicians threw their ropes and staffs, and they appeared to him as snakes. His body reacted instantly. He felt fear.

Not because he had weak īmān.
Not because he doubted Allah.
But because the nervous system responds to threat before the mind can think.

And then Allah said to him:
“Do not fear. You are the superior.” (20:68)

Allah acknowledged his fear and reassured him with protection.

Fear did not cancel his tawakkul.
Fear did not make him less beloved.
Fear did not mean he lacked trust.

Your shaking does not distance you from Allah.
Your fear does not make you less worthy.
Your body’s reaction does not erase your faith.

Your nervous system remembers the danger.
Allah remembers the entire story.

You are not failing.
You are healing.

Like, comment, and share with someone who needs this reminder.

Follow .with.samira for more.

To work 1-1 with me in therapy, book through the link in bio.

If this hit home, you’ll love my newsletter. Comment ‘more’ to get the link.

— With gratitude,
Samira





Some days your heart feels heavy in a way you can’t explain. You’re trying to trust Allah, but part of you feels tired, ...
01/12/2025

Some days your heart feels heavy in a way you can’t explain.

You’re trying to trust Allah, but part of you feels tired, stretched, or quietly overwhelmed.

You’re not alone in that feeling.

Allah told the mother of Mūsā, “Do not fear and do not grieve,” as reassurance.

It was a divine promise that what felt unbearable to her was fully known to Him.

The Qur’an itself tells us she did feel fear and sorrow. In verse 28:10, Allah says her heart “became empty.”

Ibn Kathīr in his tafsir explains this:
“Her heart became empty of everything except her worry for Mūsā. She was overwhelmed with fear and grief, and was about to expose the matter had Allah not strengthened her heart.”

This tells us something important:

Feeling fear does not mean you lack faith.
Feeling grief does not mean you failed.
Deep emotion does not cancel trust in Allah.

In trauma-informed therapy, we talk about how the body responds to stress or uncertainty.

These responses aren’t flaws.
They are survival signals.
They tell us we’re carrying something heavy and we need support.

And spiritually, our tradition honours this reality.
So many of Allah’s beloved servants felt fear, sadness, and pain.

Yet they were still held, guided, and protected.

Trusting Allah does not mean pretending you’re okay.

It means turning toward Him even when your heart feels fragile.

If you’re navigating a difficult moment right now, try these gentle practices:

• Pause and breathe slowly, letting your body settle.
• Name what you’re feeling without judging it.
• Make a simple duʿā’ like “Yā Allah, make this easy for me.”
• Remind yourself that Allah sees the part of your struggle no one else sees.

You’re not asked to be unbreakable.

You’re asked to remember that Allah is near, especially when things feel heavy.

Follow .with.samira for more.

To work 1-1 with me in therapy, book through the link in bio.

If this hit home, you’ll love my newsletter. Comment ‘more’ to get the link.

Which reminder did your heart need today?

With gratitude,
Samira

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