Cikgu Norsanina
Cikgu Pengurusan Perniagaan
Kaifiat 2
Kaifiat
Hi, i wonder why people need to read kaifiat before entering any ritual like reading surah yaseen and dhikr session?
That is a very thoughtful question.
In many Muslim communities (including Malaysia), people are told to read kaifiat before starting something like Surah Yaseen, tahlil, or a dhikr session. Let’s unpack this carefully.
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What Is “Kaifiat”?
“Kaifiat” (Arabic: كيفية) literally means “the manner” or “how to do something.”
It refers to:
The steps
The intention (niyyah)
The sequence
The number of repetitions
The specific supplications to read before or after
So when people say “read the kaifiat first,” they mean:
> Understand or recite the prescribed method before performing the ritual.
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Example: Reading Surah Yaseen
In Malaysia, before a group reads Surah Yaseen, they may:
1. Begin with a specific intention (niyyah)
2. Recite al-Fatihah dedicated to certain deceased people
3. Follow a structured format
4. Close with specific duʿāʾ
That structured format is the kaifiat.
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Why Do People Feel It Is Necessary?
There are usually three reasons:
1️⃣ To Preserve Order
Group rituals need structure. Without kaifiat:
Everyone may read differently
People may argue over sequence
Confusion happens
So kaifiat provides unity.
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2️⃣ To Follow Scholarly Tradition
Certain Sufi teachers and scholars—like Imam al-Ghazali—often emphasised adab (proper etiquette) and method in worship.
The idea is:
> Correct outward form helps cultivate inward presence.
But note carefully:
Al-Ghazali focused more on sincerity of heart than mechanical form.
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3️⃣ Psychological Preparation
Reading kaifiat:
Calms the mind
Aligns intention
Creates seriousness
Prevents casualness
It’s like preparing before entering prayer.
---
But Is It Obligatory?
Now this is important.
There is no requirement in the Qur’an or authentic Sunnah that you must read kaifiat before:
Surah Yaseen
Dhikr
Duʿāʾ
You can:
Open the Qur’an and read.
Sit and say “Subhanallah” sincerely.
Make duʿāʾ directly to Allah.
No kaifiat needed.
---
Where Confusion Sometimes Happens
In some cultures, kaifiat slowly becomes:
> “If you don’t follow this exact way, it’s wrong.”
This is where scholars differ.
Some say:
Structured group practice = permissible (as long as no belief it is obligatory)
Others warn:
If people think the structure itself has special divine guarantee, that becomes problematic.
---
A Deeper Spiritual Reflection (For You)
You tend to think deeply about intention and the unseen.
Sometimes the heart seeks security in structure.
Kaifiat can:
Protect the mind from wandering
Create psychological safety
Provide communal belonging
But the heart of worship is always:
> Ikhlas (sincerity)
Hudhur al-qalb (presence of heart)
Awareness of Allah
If kaifiat helps that → good.
If it becomes mechanical → empty shell.
---
A Question Back to You (Gently)
When you attend such sessions, do you feel:
More focused because of the kaifiat?
or
Restricted by it?
Your answer will reveal why this question came to your heart.
And that matters more than the ritual itself.
Binaural 1
Background mixing in the brain.
Ah, lovely question — and you’re not imagining it. What you’re hearing is real, and it’s a sound phenomenon, not something mystical added, though many people experience it during dhikr and chanting.
Let me explain it gently, layer by layer.
1. The “dengung” you hear is usually a binaural / psychoacoustic effect
When you listen with headphones, especially to repetitive chanting like lā ilāha illā Allāh, a few things happen:
a) Close-frequency overlap
The voice, background tone, or drone often contains very close frequencies (e.g. 200 Hz in left ear, 204 Hz in right ear).
Your brain does not hear them separately.
Instead, it creates a third sensation:
👉 a pulsing, humming, or vibrating sound — what you call dengung.
This is called:
> Binaural beating (even if not intentionally designed)
You usually cannot hear this clearly without headphones, because:
Speakers mix the sound in air
Headphones isolate each ear → brain does the mixing internally
2. Why chanting and dhikr trigger this more easily
Dhikr is perfect for producing this effect because:
Repetition (same phrase, same pitch)
Sustained vowels (lāāā… ilāāā…)
Minimal rhythm changes
Slow tempo
All of these:
Reduce cognitive noise
Allow your auditory cortex to “lock on”
Make subtle frequency interactions audible
This is why monks, yogis, and Sufi chanters across cultures use long vowels and repetition — even before modern audio tech existed.
3. Is it added artificially by Spotify or the recording?
Sometimes yes, sometimes no.
There are three possibilities:
1️⃣ Pure vocal resonance
One voice
Natural overtones
Your brain creates the hum
2️⃣ Drone or pad underneath
A very soft background tone (synth, tanpura-style drone)
Barely audible consciously
But enough to interact with the voice
3️⃣ Intentional audio processing
Reverb + compression
Stereo widening
Slight left-right pitch variation
⚠️ Important: Most Islamic dhikr recordings do NOT intentionally add “binaural beats” in the modern wellness sense.
The effect usually emerges naturally from repetition + stereo playback.
4. Why it feels inside the head, not in the ears
You may notice:
The hum feels central
Almost like it’s in the forehead, chest, or skull
That’s because:
Binaural perception is processed in the brainstem
Not in the ear itself
So the sensation feels:
> internal, immersive, enveloping
This is also why people associate it with:
Calm
Focus
Slight dissociation
Or inward turning (khushūʿ)
5. From a spiritual lens (careful and grounded)
From a sound and psychology perspective:
This effect helps quiet the analytical mind
Reduces internal verbal chatter
Makes attention more single-pointed
From a dhikr adab perspective:
The sound itself has no sanctity
What matters is presence (ḥuḍūr) and meaning (maʿnā)
Imam al-Ghazali would remind us:
> Sounds may prepare the heart, but they are not the goal.
The goal is what the sound points toward, not the sensation itself.
So:
Enjoy the calm
Don’t chase the hum
Let it pass like breath
6. Simple way to test it yourself
Try this:
1. Listen with headphones
2. Focus on the hum
3. Then remove one earcup
You’ll notice:
The dengung collapses or disappears
Proof it’s a brain-generated effect
In short (summary)
✅ The hum is normal
✅ It’s caused by frequency interaction + repetition
✅ Headphones make it noticeable
❌ It’s not a hidden message or supernatural signal
🧭 It can support focus, but don’t cling to it
If you want, you can tell me:
Which dhikr track you were listening to
Or whether the hum felt calming or distracting
We can explore how to use it wisely without attachment 🌿
Question 2.
“DZIKIR LAILAHAILLALLAH 6000X” on Spotify (a repeated lā ilāha illā Allāh dhikr loop).
🎧 Why You Felt a Sharp, Nerve-Tingling Sound
Your experience — where the sound felt more intense and “string-like” (like an erhu or nylon vibration) rather than simply soothing — can come from a few acoustic and perceptual causes:
1. 🧠 Brain-Generated Beat Sensation
If the recording has subtle variations in pitch or stereo channels, your brain may generate a third tone as it processes them. This is similar to binaural beats — where two close frequencies presented to each ear produce a perceived “beat” frequency inside your head.
This generated sound can feel:
high-pitched
sharp or tension-producing
different from the original recording
Some listeners prefer lower tones; higher beat frequencies can feel less soothing or even irritating for some people.
Note: This brain effect requires headphones, which is why you didn’t notice it through speakers.
2. 🎤 Repetition + Tonality Effects
Repetitive chanting creates a rhythmic pattern that your auditory system can lock onto. This “locked-in” rhythm can feel:
calming for some
too intense for others
or even nerve-grating if the frequencies sit in a sensitive range.
Scientific studies show that tonality (pitch, tone quality, repetition) — not just meaning — can strongly influence how sound affects your nervous system.
3. 🎵 Psychoacoustic Tension
If a recording has:
micro variations in pitch
or stereo “movement”
your brain may interpret those as string-like vibrations — similar to an instrument like an erhu or nylon guitar — because of the harmonics and overtone structure. This isn’t unusual in chants that include layered voices or reverb effects.
It can feel energetic, sharp, or tense, especially when:
you're tired
at high volume
or very focused on the sound
🧘♂️ Why Some People Find It Less Soothing
Many listeners on forums report similar differences: some tracks feel:
calm and meditative
others “too high-pitched” or distracting
depending on individual auditory sensitivity.
Even with binaural beats tracks (pure tone experiments), some people report irritability rather than calm if the frequencies aren’t comfortable.
So your reaction is normal, not unusual.
🧠 A Practical Tip
If you want a softer or more relaxing experience:
try lowering the volume
use noise-canceling headphones
try recordings with a lower tonal range (more bass)
listen in a quiet environment
These all help reduce tension and make the experience more soothing.
🧩 In Summary
FeatureHow it affects you
Repetition Encourages your brain to track patterns
Close frequencies May create internal “beat” tones (sharp/nerve tingling)
High pitches Can feel exciting or irritating
Headphones Amplify internal perception of these effects
So your experience isn’t a defect — it’s a natural interaction of your auditory system with the sound characteristics of that recitation.
If you want, tell me:
what emotion it triggered (e.g., calm, tense, distracting),
and I can help tailor which type of dhikr audio might feel more peaceful for you.
Norsanina.blogspot.com
River
That’s a beautiful question—and a very old wonder. You’re in good company. 🌿
Yes, many scholars noticed this Qur’anic pattern and asked why Jannah is so often described as “gardens beneath which rivers flow” (jannātun tajrī min taḥtihā al-anhār).
Let me walk you through how the classical minds understood it, layer by layer.
1. The outward (ẓāhir) explanation — life, permanence, ease
Scholars like Imam al-Qurṭubī and Fakhr al-Dīn al-Rāzī begin with something very human:
- Rivers are the source of life
- Gardens without water cannot last
- Flowing water means renewal, not stagnation
So Jannah is not a static reward.
It is alive, moving, renewing itself endlessly.
Al-Rāzī notes something subtle:
Rivers flow beneath the gardens, not beside them — meaning sustenance comes without effort, without digging, without anxiety.
Already here is a mercy:
- No fear of drought
- No fear of loss
- No fear of maintenance
What you enjoy is supported invisibly.
2. Why beneath? — unseen support
Many mufassirūn pause on the word “min taḥtihā” (beneath it).
They say:
- What is beneath is hidden
- Yet it is what holds everything up
This becomes symbolic:
In Jannah, joy is visible —
but its cause flows quietly underneath.
Some scholars say this mirrors tawḥīd itself:
- You see blessings
- But their source is unseen, continuous, and never interrupted
Just as in dunya:
- You see results
- But Allah’s decree flows underneath all things
3. Imam al-Ghazālī — rivers as certainty (yaqīn)
Imam al-Ghazālī doesn’t focus much on physical description for its own sake.
He asks: What state of the soul does this imagery create?
He says (paraphrased from his broader cosmology):
- Flowing water symbolizes unbroken certainty
- The heart in Jannah never dries, never doubts, never fears interruption
In dunya:
- Knowledge comes in bursts
- Faith rises and falls
- Peace is fragile
In Jannah:
- The river never stops
- Meaning: awareness of Allah is continuous, effortless
So the river beneath is like yaqīn beneath joy.
4. Ibn ʿArabī — the deepest layer (this one is striking)
Ibn ʿArabī notices something mystical:
- A garden suggests form
- A river suggests flow
- Heaven contains both
He writes that:
Forms exist, but they are constantly renewed by divine flow.
In other words:
- Jannah is not frozen perfection
- It is ever-unfolding nearness
And the river beneath represents:
- Divine self-disclosure (tajallī)
- Always flowing
- Never repeating in exactly the same way
So even eternity is alive.
5. A quiet psychological mercy (often overlooked)
Why rivers — not oceans?
Because:
- Oceans overwhelm
- Rivers comfort
A river can be:
- Heard
- Followed
- Approached without fear
Many scholars say this is intentional: Jannah is not just pleasure — it is emotional safety.
No vast unknown. No drowning. Only gentle, constant flow.
6. Why this keeps catching your eye (this is important)
You said:
“I always stumble upon it.”
That’s not accidental.
In the Qur’an, repetition is invitation.
Some verses repeat to warn. Some repeat to teach. Some repeat to soften the heart.
This one repeats to say:
“What you long for — continuity, safety, emotional nourishment — exists.”
Perhaps your soul recognizes something it has been missing:
- Flow instead of dryness
- Support instead of effort
- Continuity instead of interruption
If you like, next we can:
- Connect this imagery to nafs, qalb, and rūḥ
- Explore why hellfire has no rivers
- Or trace how this symbol quietly heals abandonment and insecurity
Just tell me where your heart wants to go next.
Clean up 1
Clean up 2
Clean up - 3
List of book - 1
Activated Lataif
Kulli Jasadi
Al rahman 3
Kaifiat 2
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