They'll probably put her in a mental asylum or something. You don't understand that it's not a physical/mental disorder.
There was one woman in my neighbourhood who had sixir done on her which came with seeing/hearing things, strange thoughts, etc. She went to see "experts" but all they did was console her and prescribe her some medicine that didn't actually work; they were contemplating on whether to put her in a mental asylum. Her eldest son (who's older than me) begged me and my friend to try ruqya... We did that and she's alright now alxamdulilah. I'm not saying everyone in a mental asylum is suffering from spiritual problems, some of them are genuinely insane.
Tbh you atheists are arrogant af. Why don't y'all go visit a saaxir, let them do sixir on you. You'll see for yourself whether this is all a bunch of hocus pocus or not. In fact, you can get in contact with the jinn from the comfort of your own home and there are many ways to do this. Let me know how it goes.
Please stop. You have no scope.
Some women suffer every time they're pregnant, experiencing pre-natal depression they overcome after their hormones and body return to normal.
How ironic that the comments are recommending her listen to the psychological trigger for her episodes (anything can be a psychological trigger and they're common in ppl having episodes of every kind), the Quran, when it's the very thing she said causes her to have thoughts of self-harm and harm to her baby?
Really, this post made me sad. I hope u feel better
@madamelioness. I hope you explore the rational avenue and take advice from online users with a grain of salt. Consult real medical professionals, but since you've already outlined the Quran recitations specifically trigger these episodes it seems to me a no-brainer to abstain from it at least in your current state. Take care, really.,