Barakah Roots

Life of a Big Family Mom

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  • Reflections,  United Arab Emirates

    One Full Trolley

    April 5, 2026 / No Comments

    This week, I filled one full trolley. The big one. At Lulu. But it didn’t start at the supermarket. It started at home, peering into the fridge and the pantry. One lonely cucumber, half-empty milk, and the kind of leftover rice that no one really wants anymore. That was when the “thinking” began. The Mental Map Before I even reached for the car keys, I was already carrying a load. It’s the list no one else sees: By the time I was walking through the aisles, I wasn’t just shopping. I was navigating a map of my family’s needs and moods. Item by item, it didn’t feel like much. Milk.…

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    mamabarakah

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    From Surabaya to Riyadh: The Barakah of the Empty Hours

    April 6, 2026
    a collage of food, molokhia stew, rendang, ratattouille, and lasagna

    The Trail I’m Leaving Behind

    April 21, 2026
    A collage of laundry racks, wooden clothespins, and washing machine cycles in a large family home. High-volume sun-drying laundry system in a Sharjah villa.

    The Secret Engine Room (a.k.a. The Side Garage)

    April 28, 2026
  • Reflections,  Sisterhood,  United Arab Emirates

    The Lunch That Lasted Until 10:00

    April 5, 2026 / No Comments

    Yesterday, something shifted. It started as a simple suggestion—a meeting for inspiring ladies near my house in Sharjah. SubhanAllah, it blew up. Suddenly, thirty women were gathered at Sadaf Restaurant, sharing a meal and a space that we all desperately needed. We ate (the food was incredible—I finally learned that Barberries are their own tiny, tart magic on rice!), but more importantly, we exhaled. Finding the “Me” in the Middle of “Them” As expat women in a faraway land, it is so easy to lose yourself. We talked about the struggle of being “just” a mom, “just” a wife, “just” a daughter. For a long time, I’ve struggled with the…

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    mamabarakah

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    When “The Best” Feels Out of Reach

    April 9, 2026
    A bright yellow banana with small brown spots lies on a dark textured carpet next to a vintage dark-brown wooden door frame. The door is slightly open, revealing a glimpse of a shadowed hallway beyond. A dramatic shaft of light illuminates the fruit on the floor

    The 10:00 AM Ramadan Heist

    April 13, 2026

    From Surabaya to Riyadh: The Barakah of the Empty Hours

    April 6, 2026
  • Children,  Reflections,  United Arab Emirates

    Tangled Hair and Me

    April 5, 2026 / No Comments

    As an Indonesian, my hair has always been simple. It is straight, fine, and easy to manage. I rarely keep it very long; once it grows past a certain point, it starts falling like rain in the monsoon back home. So I had to cut it shorter. It is always like that. It is predictable. It is quiet. My daughters, Allahumma barik, are the complete opposite. Their hair is a wild, beautiful crown—curly, dry, coarse, and long. In the Arab world, this is the “ideal.” People love to see it flowing. But the reality of living with that beauty is a weight I don’t always have the energy to carry.…

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    mamabarakah

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    A bright yellow banana with small brown spots lies on a dark textured carpet next to a vintage dark-brown wooden door frame. The door is slightly open, revealing a glimpse of a shadowed hallway beyond. A dramatic shaft of light illuminates the fruit on the floor

    The 10:00 AM Ramadan Heist

    April 13, 2026
    An image of three large woven laundry baskets packed with clean, folded clothes and towels. Bright greens, blues, and whites are visible. A few items of clothing lie softly on the plush rug in the foreground. The background is a neutral, textured wall.

    Laundry, We Will Always Have Laundry

    April 15, 2026
    A close-up shot of a fold-down airplane tray table in a dimly lit cabin. Two empty metallic tuna tins are stacked on a white napkin. A brown leather journal with a pen and a red paper cup are nearby. To the right, a passenger in a dark sweater rests their hand on their belly. The scene is illuminated by a warm overhead reading light.

    The Tuna Heist and the Moussaka’ah Mistake

    April 15, 2026
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About Me

Umm Abdallah

I’m an Indonesian mother of ten, now making a home in the Middle East. Most of my days are spent navigating the beautiful, heavy, and often messy reality of a large family and a body that requires me to move a little slower.

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Categories

  • Birth (1)
  • Books (1)
  • Children (4)
  • Covid 19 (3)
  • Doula (2)
  • Faith (2)
  • Hadith (2)
  • Islam (10)
  • Marriage (4)
  • Motherhood Unfiltered (14)
  • Movie (1)
  • Nostalgia (5)
  • Pop Cultures (5)
  • Quran (1)
  • Reflections (23)
  • Saudi Arabia (5)
  • Sisterhood (1)
  • Spiritual Perspectives (8)
  • The Big Family Life (7)
  • United Arab Emirates (12)
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