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On Narcissism: My Oh My!

It’s Just Me, Me, Me & I, I, I

Ibn al-Qayyim, may Allah have mercy upon him, wrote:

َ ‫ ( َفأ َ َنا َخ ْي ٌر ِم ْنهُ) إِل ِ ْبل‬،‫ َوقار ُْون‬،‫الثاَل َث َة ا ْب ُتل َِي ِب َها إِ ْبلِيسُ َوفِرْ َع ْون‬
،‫ِيس‬ َ ‫ َفإِنَّ َه ِذ ِه اأْل َ ْل َف‬،‘‫ َو’عِ ْندِي‬،‘‫ َو’لِي‬، ‘‫ان ’أَ َنا‬
َّ ‫اظ‬ ُ ْ‫َو ْل َيحْ َذرْ ُك َّل ْال َح َذر مِن‬
ِ ‫ط ْغ َي‬ ِ
‫ َو (إِ َّن َما أُوتِي ُت ُه َعلَى عِ ْل ٍم عِ ْندِي) لِقار ُْون‬،‫ك مِصْ َر) لِفِرْ َع ْون‬ ُ ‫و (لِي م ُْل‬.َ

‘‫ َو’ل َِي‬، ُ‫الذ ْنب‬ َّ ‫ ل َِي‬:ِ‫ فِي َق ْولِه‬،‘‫ ’لِي‬: ‫ َو َنحْ ِو ِه‬. ُ‫ ْالمُعْ َت ِرف‬،ُ‫ ْالمُسْ َت ْغفِر‬،ُ‫ ْالم ُْخطِ ئ‬، ُ‫ أَ َنا ْال َع ْب ُد ْالم ُْذنِب‬:ِ‫ت ’أَ َنا‘ فِي َق ْو ِل ْال َع ْبد‬ْ ‫َوأَحْ َسنُ َما وُ ضِ َع‬
‫ك عِ ْندِي‬َ ِ‫ َو ُك َّل َذل‬، ‫ َو َع ْمدِي‬، ‫ َو َخ َطئِي‬، ‫ َو َه ْزلِي‬، ‫اغفِرْ لِي ِج ِّدي‬ ُّ ْ ْ
ْ :ِ‫ فِي َق ْولِه‬، ‘‫ و’عِ ْندِي‬. ‫ َوالذ ُّل‬، ‫ َول َِي ال َف ْق ُر‬K،‫ َول َِي ال َمسْ َك َن ُة‬، ‫الجُرْ ُم‬. ْ

‘Beware of the tyranny of “I”, “mine” or “me”. For Iblis, Pharaoh and Korah were put to trial by these
three words. “I am better than him” [Q.7:12] was Iblis’ [trial]. “Is not mine the sovereignty of Egypt?”
[Q.43:51] was Pharaoh’s. And: “I have been given it only on account of my knowledge” [Q.28:78] was
Korah’s.

‘The best place for “I” is when a person says: “I am a sinful, wrong, repentant, confessing servant” or its
like. And “mine” when he says: “Mine is the sin, the crime, the poverty, the indigence and the shame.”
And “me’ in his saying: “[O Allah] forgive me for the sins I have done intentionally and in jest, mistakenly
or deliberately; for I have done all of that.”’1

In Greek mythology, Narcissus was a young man who was incredibly beautiful. Many fell in love with
him, but he responded to their affections with scorn and contempt. Once while walking in the woods,
Narcissus saw his own reflection in a pool of water and fell in love with it. His fixation with his own
beauty led him to eventually commit suicide when he realised he couldn’t have his object of desire. It is
from his name that we get the word, narcissism – an obsessive, egotistical admiration with one’s own
self or self-importance.

A narcissist does more than just monopolise the conversation. A narcissist is a person who feels a false
sense of entitlement, constantly needs other people to praise and admire them, be jealous of others, or
someone who lacks empathy for others because of being totally absorbed with his or her egotistical self.
Me, me me, or I, I, I are the usual tell-tale signs of narcissism. Psychologists speak of various types of
narcissistic personality disorders. There’s the toxic narcissist who is always causing drama in the lives of
others, constantly demanding to be the centre of attention and upset when they are not. Or there is the
bullying narcissists who take great pleasure in mocking people and putting them down, so they can feel
smug about their own selves. And then there’s the exhibitionist narcissist who has no shame in letting
everyone around him know that he is a narcissist.

Social media is the opium of the narcissists. In terms of teaching or preaching Islam, YouTube seems to
be awash with Muslim narcissists, particularly when it comes to refutation culture. – i.e. Muslims
attempting to refute or rebut other Muslims on some religious point or another. Instead of rooting such
criticisms or correctives in sincerity; sound scholarly research; following the Islamic rules of criticism;
fulfilling the trust of quoting the words of the one being rebutted accurately and in context; not
transgressing the rights of the one being refuted; and giving them room to retract their mistake and
return to the truth, we have a carnival of characters who show little of this, content with being
narcissistic exhibitionists and show-offs. Such are the fruits of giving up on godliness. Such is the
blindness and deadly poison of the I, I, I or me, me, me culture; may Allah save us from ourselves.

The cure, as Ibn al-Qayyim stated above, is to acknowledge that the I and me is swimming in a cesspit of
sin and ignorance, and that the best place for my I or me is to confess with as much humility and
sincerity as can be mustered that: I know very little about Islam such that I could be one of its guardians;
and that may Allah forgive me my sins and speech about His religion without sufficient knowledge, and
save me from the blazing Fire.

Amin!

1. Zad al-Ma‘ad (Beirut: Mu’assasah al-Risalah, 1998), 4:434-35.

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Posted in 2 minute transformers, a short read, psychology & mental health, sufism & spirituality and
tagged Ibn al-Qayyim on I and me, Islam and narcissism, main narcissistic traits, Muslim refutation
culture is narcissistic, narcissism and social media, the Islamic principles of refutation, the nafs and
narcissism, the sin of refuting other Muslims without proper knowledge

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On Narcissism: My Oh My! It’s Just Me, Me, Me & I, I, I

Ibn al-Qayyim, may Allah have mercy upon him, wrote:

َ ‫ ( َفأ َ َنا َخ ْي ٌر ِم ْنهُ) إِل ِ ْبل‬،‫ َوقار ُْون‬،‫الثاَل َث َة ا ْب ُتل َِي ِب َها إِ ْبلِيسُ َوفِرْ َع ْون‬
،‫ِيس‬ َ ‫ َفإِنَّ َه ِذ ِه اأْل َ ْل َف‬،‘‫ َو’عِ ْندِي‬،‘‫ َو’لِي‬، ‘‫ان ’أَ َنا‬
َّ ‫اظ‬ ُ ْ‫َو ْل َيحْ َذرْ ُك َّل ْال َح َذر مِن‬
ِ ‫ط ْغ َي‬ ِ
ْ ُ
‫ َو (إِ َّن َما أوتِي ُت ُه َعلَى عِ ل ٍم عِ ْندِي) لِقار ُْون‬،‫ك مِصْ َر) لِفِرْ َع ْون‬ ْ
ُ ‫و (لِي مُل‬.َ

‘‫ َو’ل َِي‬، ُ‫الذ ْنب‬ َّ ‫ ل َِي‬:ِ‫ فِي َق ْولِه‬،‘‫ ’لِي‬: ‫ َو َنحْ ِو ِه‬. ُ‫ ْالمُعْ َت ِرف‬،ُ‫ ْالمُسْ َت ْغفِر‬،ُ‫ ْالم ُْخطِ ئ‬، ُ‫ أَ َنا ْال َع ْب ُد ْالم ُْذنِب‬:ِ‫ت ’أَ َنا‘ فِي َق ْو ِل ْال َع ْبد‬ ْ ‫َوأَحْ َسنُ َما وُ ضِ َع‬
‫ك عِ ْندِي‬َ ‫ َو ُك َّل َذ ِل‬، ‫ َو َع ْمدِي‬، ‫ َو َخ َطئِي‬، ‫ َو َه ْزلِي‬، ‫اغفِرْ لِي ِج ِّدي‬ ْ :ِ‫ فِي َق ْو ِله‬، ‘‫ و’عِ ْندِي‬. ‫الذ ُّل‬ ُّ ‫ َو‬، ‫ َول َِي ْال َف ْق ُر‬K،‫ َول َِي ْال َمسْ َك َن ُة‬، ‫الجُرْ ُم‬.
ْ

‘Beware of the tyranny of “I”, “mine” or “me”. For Iblis, Pharaoh and Korah were put to trial by these
three words. “I am better than him” [Q.7:12] was Iblis’ [trial]. “Is not mine the sovereignty of Egypt?”
[Q.43:51] was Pharaoh’s. And: “I have been given it only on account of my knowledge” [Q.28:78] was
Korah’s.

‘The best place for “I” is when a person says: “I am a sinful, wrong, repentant, confessing servant” or its
like. And “mine” when he says: “Mine is the sin, the crime, the poverty, the indigence and the shame.”
And “me’ in his saying: “[O Allah] forgive me for the sins I have done intentionally and in jest, mistakenly
or deliberately; for I have done all of that.”’1


In Greek mythology, Narcissus was a young man who was incredibly beautiful. Many fell in love with
him, but he responded to their affections with scorn and contempt. Once while walking in the woods,
Narcissus saw his own reflection in a pool of water and fell in love with it. His fixation with his own
beauty led him to eventually commit suicide when he realised he couldn’t have his object of desire. It is
from his name that we get the word, narcissism – an obsessive, egotistical admiration with one’s own
self or self-importance.

A narcissist does more than just monopolise the conversation. A narcissist is a person who feels a false
sense of entitlement, constantly needs other people to praise and admire them, be jealous of others, or
someone who lacks empathy for others because of being totally absorbed with his or her egotistical self.
Me, me me, or I, I, I are the usual tell-tale signs of narcissism. Psychologists speak of various types of
narcissistic personality disorders. There’s the toxic narcissist who is always causing drama in the lives of
others, constantly demanding to be the centre of attention and upset when they are not. Or there is the
bullying narcissists who take great pleasure in mocking people and putting them down, so they can feel
smug about their own selves. And then there’s the exhibitionist narcissist who has no shame in letting
everyone around him know that he is a narcissist.

Social media is the opium of the narcissists. In terms of teaching or preaching Islam, YouTube seems to
be awash with Muslim narcissists, particularly when it comes to refutation culture. – i.e. Muslims
attempting to refute or rebut other Muslims on some religious point or another. Instead of rooting such
criticisms or correctives in sincerity; sound scholarly research; following the Islamic rules of criticism;
fulfilling the trust of quoting the words of the one being rebutted accurately and in context; not
transgressing the rights of the one being refuted; and giving them room to retract their mistake and
return to the truth, we have a carnival of characters who show little of this, content with being
narcissistic exhibitionists and show-offs. Such are the fruits of giving up on godliness. Such is the
blindness and deadly poison of the I, I, I or me, me, me culture; may Allah save us from ourselves.

The cure, as Ibn al-Qayyim stated above, is to acknowledge that the I and me is swimming in a cesspit of
sin and ignorance, and that the best place for my I or me is to confess with as much humility and
sincerity as can be mustered that: I know very little about Islam such that I could be one of its guardians;
and that may Allah forgive me my sins and speech about His religion without sufficient knowledge, and
save me from the blazing Fire.

Amin!


1. Zad al-Ma‘ad (Beirut: Mu’assasah al-Risalah, 1998), 4:434-35.

Share this:

Telegram

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Print

Like this:

Posted in 2 minute transformers, a short read, psychology & mental health, sufism & spirituality and
tagged Ibn al-Qayyim on I and me, Islam and narcissism, main narcissistic traits, Muslim refutation
culture is narcissistic, narcissism and social media, the Islamic principles of refutation, the nafs and
narcissism, the sin of refuting other Muslims without proper knowledge

← Older Entry

Newer Entry →

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