This dua is a complete architecture of surrender — each phrase building on the last. Read it slowly.
أسْلَمْتُ نَفْسِي إلَيْكَ
Aslamtu nafsi ilayk
I Surrender My Self to You — The Whole Dua in One Sentence ✦
"Aslamtu" from "aslama" — to surrender, to submit, to hand over completely. This is the same root as "Islam" — complete submission. "Nafsi" — my self, my soul, my entire being. "Ilayk" — to You, directed entirely to Allah. This opening phrase is the entire dua compressed into one sentence. Everything that follows is an elaboration of what that surrender looks like in practice.
📌 Sleep as the Physical Act of Islam: When you lie down, you physically lose control. Your body becomes vulnerable. Your consciousness goes. Sleep is, by its nature, an act of surrender — whether you acknowledge it or not. This dua makes the surrender conscious and intentional: "Before my body surrenders involuntarily to sleep, I surrender my self voluntarily to You."
وفَوَّضْتُ أمْرِي إلَيْكَ
Wa fawwadtu amri ilayk
I Delegate My Affairs to You — The Islamic Practice for Night Anxiety
"Fawwadtu" from "fawwada" — to delegate, to entrust completely, to hand over management of something to someone else. "Amri" — my affair, my matter, my situation — everything going on in my life. The job, the relationship, the health matter, the financial situation, the unresolved concern, the worry that was in your mind when you lay down. All of it: "I hand the management of all of it to You." The One who never sleeps will hold your affairs while you rest. You do not need to carry them into sleep.
وأَلْجَأْتُ ظَهْرِي إلَيْكَ
Wa alja'tu zahri ilayk
I Lean My Back Upon You — The Image of Complete Trust
"Alja'tu" — to lean against, to use as a support. "Zahri" — my back. When you lean your back against something, you are trusting it to hold your weight. You are putting the full pressure of your body against it and trusting it will not give way. You cannot lean your back against something while simultaneously tensing to hold yourself up — leaning requires releasing. Before sleep: "I am leaning all my weight, all my vulnerability, against You. You are what holds me while I am unable to hold myself."
رَغْبَةً ورَهْبَةً إلَيْكَ
Raghbatan wa rahbatan ilayk
With Desire and Awe Toward You — Both Are Required
"Raghbah" — desire, love, longing, wanting to be near. The movement of genuine love toward Allah. "Rahbah" — awe, reverence, holy fear. The appropriate recognition of the magnitude of the One being addressed. Together they produce the balanced heart that approaches Allah with both genuine desire and genuine reverence. Raghbah without rahbah becomes presumptuous. Rahbah without raghbah becomes fear without love. Together — they are the correct Islamic orientation toward Allah.
لا مَلْجَا ولَا مَنْجَا مِنْكَ إلَّا إلَيْكَ
La malja'a wa la manja minka illa ilayk
No Refuge From You Except To You — The Bedtime Paradox ✦
"La malja'a" — no place of refuge. "Wa la manja" — and no salvation, no escape. "Minka" — from You. "Illa ilayk" — except to You. The phrase seems paradoxical: no refuge from You except to You. What does it mean? It means: You are the source of all that comes — good and trial, blessing and test. There is no hiding from Allah's decree. But the only true refuge from difficulty, from fear, from the unknown of the night, is also Allah Himself. The One whose decree you cannot escape is the only One who can protect you within that decree.
📌 Why This Phrase at Bedtime Specifically: At night, you are most vulnerable. You cannot defend yourself while asleep. You cannot plan against whatever the night might bring. This phrase meets that vulnerability with the only honest response: "There is nowhere to go anyway — no place to hide, no way to escape anything. Except to You. So here I am. With You." That surrender is not defeat. It is the most rational, most peaceful place a human being can rest.
آمَنْتُ بكِتَابِكَ · وبِنَبِيِّكَ
Amantu bikitabika · wa binabiyyika
I Believe in Your Book and Your Prophet — The Foundation of the Surrender
After the complete surrender of self, affairs, and back — after raghbah and rahbah, after the acknowledgment that there is nowhere to go but to You — the dua closes with a declaration of faith. "I believe in Your Book" — the Quran that tells you who Allah is and what He promises. "And Your Prophet" — "nabiyyika," the recipient and carrier of divine revelation. The surrender rests on iman. The dua ends by affirming the foundation that makes the surrender meaningful: you are not surrendering blindly — you are surrendering to the Allah whose Book you believe in and whose Prophet you follow.