October 2025
Dispersed Identity
There was a time when I thought finding myself meant choosing one version of me and discarding the rest. But life, and faith, taught me otherwise. I grew up in a world where identity was written for me before I could even speak it.
My name, my race, my religion. All defined what I was supposed to believe, how I was supposed to live, and who I was supposed to become. When I walked away from Islam, I didn’t just lose a religion I lost a version of myself that had been carefully constructed by my environment.
For a while, I felt hollow as if pieces of me were scattered in too many directions. I was no longer who I used to be, but I didn’t yet know who I was becoming. That’s when I began to understand dispersed identity. Each fragment of me: the believer I once was, the skeptic who questioned, the humanist who seeks empathy, the rational thinker who values reason, all coexist within me.
And strangely, it’s this coexistence that keeps me sane. It allows me to look at faith without hatred. To remember where I came from without bitterness. To critique religion without dehumanising those who still find comfort in it. I can be an ex-Muslim without being anti-Muslim because my identity, though dispersed, is anchored in empathy.
There are days when people expect me to take a side, to be either militant in my disbelief or silent in fear. But I’ve learned that moderation isn’t weakness it’s maturity. I don’t need to destroy what others hold sacred to affirm my own freedom. I don’t need to swing to apathy to prove detachment. I can stand at peace in the in-between.
My dispersed identity helps me do that. It reminds me that contradictions aren’t failures of character. They’re the fingerprints of a human still growing, still learning how to exist with grace in a divided world. When I’m alone, away from debates and noise, I feel closest to my truth, not as the ex-Muslim, not as the rebel, but simply as myself. A human being who has seen both faith and doubt, and learned to hold space for both. So no, I’m not fragmented. I’m layered.
Every version of me: the boy who prayed, the man who questioned, the person who now seeks meaning beyond belief, belongs. And maybe that’s what peace really is: learning that you don’t have to erase your past to embrace your present. 🌙