Y a qu'à / Faut qu'on
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  • Parts 1
  • Time 5m
  • Reads 2
  • Votes 1
  • Parts 1
  • Time 5m
Ongoing, First published Mar 26, 2018
Beaucoup ont dans leur entourage des personnes qui se plaisent à donner des leçons à toute occasion. Des personnes pour lesquelles l'expression « y a qu'à - faut qu'on » prend tout son sens.  

Ces donneurs de leçons peuvent alors être de deux natures : certains seront bienveillants, dans l'empathie réelle alors que d'autres seront moins généreux, plus hautains. 
Mais sommes-nous réellement capables de faire la part des choses entre les uns et les autres ? Les événements subis donnant lieu à leur intervention ne modifient-ils pas notre perception ?

De façon certaine, nos sentiments interfèrent notre capacité à distinguer le bien du mal, notre capacité à apprécier à sa juste valeur les propos des personnes qui nous entourent.
Lors d'événements marquants, notre seule envie est de nous replier sur nous-même, de faire abstraction de tout ce qui nous entoure, de tous ceux qui nous entourent. 
Ma seule envie, à moi, a été de faire le vide, de me laisser sombrer, de n'écouter personne. 
Ma première envie a été celle-ci. 
Avec le temps, la vraie personnalité reprend sa place. Nos yeux se rouvrent. 

Un témoignage à travers des événements communs comme le mariage, le divorce, le licenciement.....
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You, my Punishment (Islamic Story) by sssilentscreamsss
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"I know that we will never be a real couple, but we can at least be nice to each other Aneel" I told him. I've had enough. Tears were starting to prick my eyes, but I didn't let them fall. He looked over at me in a weird expression. Like if I died in front of him, he wouldn't care. "You don't get it, do you?! I. will. never. love. you! I will never care for you. You wait, every day, for me to come home and have dinner with you like normal couples do- you are pathetic. You are nothing! Absolutely nothing to me. You are not even worth my words. You are a loser who has nobody- your parents? They are just like me. They knew that you were worthless and wanted to get rid of you" he said angrily. I was not angry at him. He was telling the truth. I'm nothing. Never was, never will. I nodded. He was right. He was so damn right. Sahra Ali is eighteen years old when she gets married. It was not a marriage out of love, no, she was forced into it. Shre grew up being abused. Her parents sold her for money. No parent would do that, so are her so called parents her real parents? She is trying to survive this marriage, because she believes in Allah and knows that He had a good reason that He gave her all these pain. Aneel Osman is a badboy who wants nothing to do with Islam. He was a muslim when he was younger, but when something bad happened, he blamed Allah for it. Deep inside he knows that it is wrong, but shoves that thought away. He began doing the things Allah prohibited. There was no one to hold onto or to pull him out. He kept falling and falling. And when he has to deal with that girl his parents wants him to marry, he is losing himself more and more. Read the description in the book for the fully version! This is a short draft! ~ Salaam guys, this story is edited! Almost everything has CHANGED and it is now a mature story. I like how it turned out. Thank you for all your support! It still contains small grammar mistakes. You have been warned:)
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Peer e kamil ( the perfect mentor)

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Peer-e-Kamil (The Perfect Mentor) by Umera Ahmed is a thought-provoking and deeply moving Urdu novel that explores themes of spirituality, self-discovery, love, and redemption. The story revolves around two contrasting characters, Salaar Sikander and Imama Hashim, whose lives intertwine in unexpected and transformative ways. All copyrights for Peer-e-Kamil and its content belong to Umera Ahmed. I have only translated this into English.