Hawa: the pull of desire

Islamic Psychology  ·  Explained

Hawa: the pull of desire.

The rule of unchecked whim and craving, and the psychology of impulse and self-regulation.

Hawa is caprice, the following of unchecked desire and whim. The Qur’an warns severely against it, even describing the one who takes his hawa as his god (25:43). It is the engine that drives the commanding self.

In the tradition

Importantly, hawa is not desire itself, which is natural and God-given, but the unchecked rule of desire over the person. The danger is not that we want, but that wanting governs us, overriding reason, values and consequence.

The modern parallel

Psychology describes the powerful pull of immediate reward and the counter-capacity of self-regulation, the ability to pause, delay and choose. Difficulty here sits at the heart of everything from procrastination to addiction. Hawa names this same pull, and the moral and psychological work of governing it.

Why it matters

The tradition does not ask us to kill desire, only to govern it, letting the aql and our values, rather than raw impulse, hold the reins. That governance is not joyless restriction; it is the very definition of freedom.

Part of the Mentscape encyclopedia of Islamic psychology. Educational writing, not personal clinical advice.

Begin

Understand your own nafs

Mentscape

Islamic psychiatry and modern neuroscience, for Muslims who want to heal without leaving their faith at the door.

Written and overseen by a practising psychiatrist and psychotherapist.