The Phone Call That Rewired My Entire Understanding of Power
Bismillah, sisters… I want to share a story that changed me forever. One Friday afternoon, my eldest son came home quiet — too quiet. No smile, no words. Just silence. He finally said he and two classmates were suspended for using their phones in class. That one incident could have cost him his scholarship, his reputation, and his future. But here’s what shook me…The other two boys? Children of immigrants who couldn’t speak English. Their mothers couldn’t even defend them. They were at the mercy of a system that didn’t see them. And in that moment — I felt it. The fear. The helplessness. The weight of being unseen. But I also felt something else rise inside me — certainty. It wasn’t loud. It wasn’t angry. It was calm. Commanding. Anchored in Allah. I picked up the phone, called the school, and spoke to the principal. And with complete composure, I said: “No police or teacher will speak to my son without his lawyer present. We represent all three boys. I expect this to be resolved by Monday.” And you know what? By Monday, all three boys were back in school — no record, no stain, no suspension. That day, I realized something every Muslim woman must know: Sales is not just business.Sales is life. It's influence. It’s negotiation. It’s your ability to stand tall and speak with divine confidence — without losing your adab or your faith. That phone call was sacred sales in action. And it’s exactly what we’ll be unlocking together in The Sacred Recode™ this weekend. Because you were never meant to stay silent. You were meant to speak with light. 🌙 In 3 days, we begin THE SACRED RECODE. If you’re ready to spiritually and financially recode your life before 2026… Love, Fatima P.S. I know you have a friend — a woman who’s been dimming her light, afraid to speak up, shrinking her voice to keep the peace. Invite her. 🌙 Invite the woman who always over-gives. Invite the woman who’s tired of being misunderstood. Invite the woman who needs to remember that her silence is not her safety — her voice is.