I am equipping you to prepare your children to face the fitnah of the world with a strong Islamic identity, clarity, and inner confidence — before the world gets to them first.

You are going to learn how to navigate sensitive topics like body safety, intimacy, how babies are born, and every uncomfortable question your child asks — through an Islamic lens that preserves innocence.

No shying away with:     

“You’re too young to understand.”

Instead — age-appropriate, grounded conversations that make your child feel:

“I can come back to my mom when I’m confused.”

I AM IN!

The World is after our children’s Fitrah & Innocence like never Before.

 

➡️ Your 6-year-old daughter looks at women in crop tops and tight jeans at the mall and asks,
“Why can’t I wear that?”
And suddenly, modesty doesn’t feel theoretical anymore.

➡️ Your 7-year-old son tells you he likes a girl in his class —
and you freeze…unsure how to respond without shutting him down or normalising emotional attachment too early.

➡️ Your 4-year-old casually tells you how her 6-year-old friend showed her private parts while playing in a room at an iftar gathering — and your heart drops.
You’re shaken, angry, scared… and clueless about what to say now and how to protect her next time.

➡️ You once told your 5-year-old, “Babies come from Allah” —
but today his classmate told him about sex. Now he looks at you differently.
The trust cracked.

 


 

We cannot leave our children at the mercy of:

  • playground conversations
  • older cousins
  • YouTube “explainers”
  • cartoons normalising immodesty
  • or society’s loud confusion 

We must open the door and have that talk—
so our children know home is safe, even when the world feels disruptive and confusing.

You know that shunning away these questions does not protect innocence.
It only creates confusion, secrecy, and distance in a child’s Islamic identity.

You don’t need scripts copied from Western parenting books.
You need an Islamically anchored method to handle these conversations with hikmah and confidence.

👉 That is the method I equip you with in Guardians of The Fitrah.

I’m Ready to Lead These Conversations

This is not another course telling you to:

“Just teach the names of private parts so children are informed.”

This is a fitrah-focused framework that:

  • prioritises innocence
  • protects haya
  • and still prepares your child for the reality of the world.

— without fear, shame, or overexposure.


 

Imagine this…

  • You know exactly what to say when your child asks something shocking —
    in a way that calms them, grounds them, and pulls them closer to you.
  • Your daughter wants to observe hijab and modesty — not because you told them to,
    but because her haya was preserved and nurtured from within.
  • Your children recognise unsafe situations early, know how to say NO, and confidently walk away — without freezing or people-pleasing.
  • Your child comes to you — after an inappropriate touch, comment, or exposure from a friend or relative — because you made it safe to talk.
  • Your children grow up with an Islamic lens on:
    marriage, attraction, intimacy, gender confusion, and modern taboos —
    instead of absorbing the world’s distorted narratives in silence. 

You already know this truth:
Waiting for children to “grow up” before having these conversations doesn’t protect them.

It simply leaves them alone to figure it out through: friends, google, and misinformation.

I’m Not Leaving This to the World

Here’s how your 3 PART experience will look like…

Part 1: Preserving the Fitrah & Cultivating Haya

  • Understand the fitrah children are born upon and why haya is a natural branch of faith — not something we “force” later.

  • Navigate exposure to immodesty (public spaces, cartoons, social media, relatives) without panic or paranoia.

  • Nurture Haya by elevating your child’s self-worth, not by shaming or policing their body.

  • Introduce hijab and modest dressing: when to start & how to start.

Part 2: Body Safety

  • Teach children that their body is an amanah from Allah, deserving of respect and protection.
  • Help your child identify safe people and develop discernment — not blind obedience.
  • Explain safe vs unsafe touch in a way that is age-appropriate and emotionally intuitive (how it feels, not just rules).
  • Confidently stand for your child with clingy relatives — and offer respectful, alternative ways to greet without guilt. 

Part 3: Navigating Sensitive Conversations With Clarity

  • Approach topics like periods, marriage, intimacy, and puberty without awkwardness or overexposure.
  • Understand the principle: “When they ask, they are ready” — and how to respond wisely.
  • Introduce information age-wise with proper scaffolding as your child grows older.
  • Keep the door of communication open always, so your child comes to you first — not Google.
You already know that sweeping these questions under the rug,
hoping your children won’t face them,
only keeps you unprepared — and your children vulnerable.

This is for you if:

  • You are a proactive mother who wants to be prepared for the tarbiyah your child needs to navigate this dunya.
  • Your child might be just 3 years old, but you want to be ready for the day your 7-year-old asks why you don’t pray on some days of the month.
  • You know avoiding these conversations creates confusion in Islamic belief, and you refuse to let that happen.
  • You want to keep the door of conversation wide open, so your children see you as:

their safe space, their guide,
their anchor back to fitrah — without shame.

3 Power-Packed Video Trainings 


This isn’t another program you “consume and move on from.”

This is you stepping into your role as the first line of protection for your child’s fitrah —
so their first understanding of these topics comes from you, anchored in Deen, not distortion.

Equip Me Before It’s Too Late

Register Now!

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