Islamic Counselling
For Muslim women navigating grief, relationship difficulty, family pressure, and faith questions — with a practitioner who holds both Islamic knowledge and psychological training as equal tools.
Bolanle Emmanuel · MSc Psychology, Liverpool John Moores University
Islamic Counselling: Both worlds. One door.
For Muslim women navigating grief, relationship difficulty, family pressure, and faith questions — with a practitioner who holds both Islamic knowledge and psychological training as equal tools.
This is not religious advice, and it is not therapy that happens to mention Allah. It is a practice where Quranic wisdom and evidence-based psychology are held together — because for many Muslim women, being asked to separate them is being asked to split in two.
Sessions may draw on concepts of sabr, tawakkul, and the Islamic understanding of the nafs alongside cognitive and narrative approaches. You will never be told to choose between your deen and your healing.
Open to Muslim women at any point in their faith journey — devout, questioning, or somewhere in between.
- Faith-integrated
- Sabr & tawakkul
- Cognitive approaches
- Women
- Diaspora-welcome
these services are not a substitute for medical advice