I never went to university.
I used to feel embarrassed saying that out loud.
Especially when I sat beside people with degrees, titles, polished language, corporate backgrounds.
Meanwhile I was learning life another way.
The hard way mostly.
Burnout.
Single motherhood.
Pressure.
Bad decisions.
Financial collapse.
Being lied to.
Being too trusting.
Hiring private mentors
Rebuilding again and again.
Upleveling my Yaqeen in Allah swt.
That became my education.
And strangely enough…
that education taught me more about people than any classroom probably could have.
Because when you’ve had your back against the wall enough times, you start seeing human behaviour differently.
You learn:
who folds under pressure.
Who manipulates.
Who avoids decisions.
Who needs certainty.
Who is telling the truth.
Who is terrified underneath confidence.
You stop listening only to words.
You start listening to energy.
Timing.
Hesitation.
Emotional patterns.
That changed how I understand sales completely.
Most people think high-ticket sales is persuasion.
It’s not.
It’s emotional intelligence.
It’s trust.
It’s knowing how to stay calm while someone else is uncertain.
That’s why some people can memorize scripts all day and still struggle to close anything.
Buyers can feel unstable energy immediately.
Especially now.
AI is changing business fast.
The economy is changing fast.
And the women who will survive this next era are not necessarily the loudest women online.
They’re the women who learn how to:
communicate clearly,
regulate emotion,
build trust,
and lead conversations calmly under pressure.
That’s a real skill.
And honestly?
I wish more Muslim women understood how valuable that skill is becoming.
3:50
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1 comment
Fatima Khamissa
6
I never went to university.
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