Not everyone who gives up is wrong.
Some grow tired of doing the right thing alone.
In Episode 7 of MIB Management 101, I reflect on sabar and istiqamah — what it truly means to remain steadfast when change is slow, resistance is subtle, and integrity feels isolated.
☕ KopiTalk with MHO | MIB Management 101
“Ad-dāʾimūna al-muḥsinūna bi-l-hudā — Always render service with God’s guidance.”
When Doing the Right Thing Starts to Feel Heavy
I once watched a capable, well-intentioned officer quietly give up.
Not because he was wrong.
Not because he was lazy.
Not because he lacked ideas.
He gave up because doing the right thing took too long.
Looking back, many of these moments only began to make sense later when I started to see work not merely as output, but as a service guided by something higher.
He entered the organisation with energy and hope. He asked questions others avoided. He suggested improvements that others postponed. He tried to solve problems that people had learned to live with.
At first, he was tolerated.
Then he was labelled belabih.
After that, he was slowly ignored.
Eventually, he stopped pushing.
He still came to work.
He still did what was required.
But something had dimmed.
That moment stayed with me because it reminded me of this:
Not all failures come from bad intentions. Some come from patience slowly wearing thin.
The Quiet Struggle of Those Who Want Change
Most people don’t enter the workplace wanting to cut corners.
They want to contribute.
They want to improve things.
They want to believe their efforts matter.
But over time, resistance appears — not always loudly, not always openly.
Sometimes it comes as:
- endless delays
- polite deflections
- reminders to ikut cara lama
- warnings not to disturb the balance
Change does not always fail through confrontation. More often, it fades through fatigue.
People don’t abandon principles because they stop believing in them. They abandon them because standing alone is tiring.
Over the years, I have come to realise that these quiet struggles are not unknown at the highest level.
His Majesty has repeatedly reminded leaders that their duty is not merely to hold office, but to care, guide, and show concern for those under their charge.
Leadership, in this understanding, is not about looking down from above, but about staying close enough to notice when people are struggling.
In a Negara Zikir, patience is not weakness. It is how conscience survives pressure.
Sabar Is Not Silence
Sabar is often misunderstood.
It is not about keeping quiet at all costs.
It is not about accepting everything.
It is not about pretending nothing hurts.
Sabar, to me, is emotional discipline.
It is feeling frustrated — and choosing not to become bitter.
It is feeling disappointment — and choosing not to give up on yourself.
The Qur’an reminds us:
“Indeed, Allah is with those who are patient.” (Al-Baqarah 2:153)
Not those who shut down.
Not those who pretend.
But those who stay steady without losing their values.
Istiqamah Is Not About Being Hard-Headed
Istiqamah, too, is often misunderstood.
It is not about pushing endlessly.
It is not about winning arguments.
And it is not about forcing change.
Istiqamah is about moral consistency.
It means staying upright when shortcuts are tempting.
It means remaining honest when dishonesty seems rewarded.
It means doing what is right even when no one notices.
The Qur’an says:
“So remain steadfast as you have been commanded.” (Hud 11:112)
Not as long as it feels comfortable.
Not as long as applause comes.
But as you have been guided.
When ‘Belabih’ Becomes a Label for Integrity
In some workplaces, people who remain consistent are not encouraged.
They are labelled.
Too idealistic.
Too vocal.
Too ambitious.
Too different.
Sometimes, istiqamah is mistaken for defiance.
Sometimes, sincerity makes others uncomfortable.
I have seen capable people sidelined — not because they were wrong, but because they refused to bend quietly.
This is where many start asking themselves:
“Is it worth it?”
This is where sabar and istiqamah begin to need each other.
Sabar keeps the heart steady.
Istiqamah keeps the direction clear.
Knowing When to Pause Without Giving Up
One difficult lesson I have learned is this:
Sabar does not always mean pushing forward.
Sometimes it means slowing down.
Istiqamah does not always mean staying loud.
Sometimes it means staying clean.
There are moments when reform is not about winning today — but about planting seeds quietly.
Not every sincere effort bears fruit in our lifetime.
But every sincere effort still counts.
And sometimes, that has to be enough.
Closing Reflection: Staying Upright When the Path Is Crooked
Leadership, especially principled leadership, is not a sprint.
Systems change slowly.
Mindsets change more slowly.
Egos change the slowest of all.
Along the way, many good people grow tired — not because they lack faith, but because they feel alone.
I am reminded of moments when welfare concerns were raised by rank-and-file officers, and His Majesty chose to listen rather than dismiss.
He did not side with position or rank, but with fairness. That matters because it tells those who try to remain upright that patience is not invisible, and consistency is not pointless.
Sabar reminds us not to abandon ourselves.
Istiqamah reminds us not to abandon what is right.
And perhaps the question is not:
“Why is change taking so long?”
But this:
“Can I remain honest, kind, and principled — even while waiting?”
Perhaps this is what it means to keep rendering service with guidance — not perfectly, but sincerely.
Because sometimes, the real test of leadership is not how much we change the system…
…but how well we remain ourselves while living within it.
📖 KopiTalk with MHO — reflections brewed gently, with honesty and heart.


