The 10-Minute Parent's Guide

A reflection on your child's wellbeing for UK Muslim parents. Six pillars, evidence-grounded.

10 minutes Ages 8 to 12 Free No PDF, no spam

A starting point for your reflection

Take 10 minutes to think about how things are going for your child across the six pillars of family wellbeing: rest, food, movement, focus, mood, and faith.

You'll get a personalised reflection page with three specific things to try this month, calibrated to your family.

Remove harm before adding benefit

Most family wellbeing gains come from removing something that's silently working against you, not adding something new.

Everyone is different

Your child is not a population average. Use this reflection as a starting point for your own thinking.

Who answers each question

Each question is tagged so you know who it's for. Look for these labels at the top of every question:

Parent

You answer on your own. Most questions are these; they're about your observations of family rhythm.

Together

You answer alongside your child where it helps to compare notes (for example, weekend wake-up times).

Child

You ask your child the question directly and choose the answer that fits what they say. Two questions only.

Question 1

Your reflection is ready

Enter your email to see your result page and to join the MuslimHealthExpert newsletter. You can unsubscribe at any time.

We capture your email and your first name only. We don't store your answers. UK GDPR compliant.

Preparing your reflection

Reading your reflection...

Your reflection

The six pillars

The shape of your reflection

A closer look

Below is a closer look at the answers behind your pillar scores. Each tile shows one of the everyday patterns we asked about. Green tiles marked WORKING are going well, amber tiles marked SETTLING have room to settle, and red tiles marked ATTENTION are worth gentle attention this month.

Three areas to gently support this month

Remove harm before adding benefit. Everyone is different. These three first moves are calibrated to your answers, not to a one-size-fits-all checklist. Pick the one that feels most doable this week, and start there.

Talking with your child about this

Some of what you reflected on is about you and your family rhythm. Some of it is about your child directly. Children at this age respond well when their experience is heard and their agency is respected. A few practical thoughts on bringing them into this with you:

  • Lead with curiosity, not concern. Ask them what they think helps them sleep, focus, feel settled, or enjoy the day. Children often have clearer self-knowledge than we give them credit for.
  • Pick one small change, together. If you've decided to move screens out of the bedroom or anchor the morning with daylight, frame it as something the family is trying together, not a rule imposed on them.
  • Acknowledge what's working. Children whose strengths are noticed tend to be more open to small changes elsewhere. If your reflection showed strong pillars, name them out loud.
  • Respect their voice on faith and identity. Faith conversations are best held alongside the child, not at the child. Conviction is transmitted through visible practice, not through instruction.

When to seek professional help

This reflection is a starting point for your own thinking. It is not a clinical assessment. If anything specific is concerning you, or if any of the patterns your reflection surfaced feel like they need more than a family rhythm change, your GP is the right first point of contact.

Your GP. Your GP is the right first point of contact for any health concern about your child. They can examine, assess, and refer onward where needed.

Where to next

Want a weekly thought from your holistic health pharmacist? The MuslimHealthExpert newsletter goes out once a week with one practical idea for family wellbeing, anchored in evidence and the Sunnah where it genuinely fits. You've already subscribed by taking this reflection. To make sure you don't miss the first email, check your inbox (and your spam folder, just in case) for the confirmation message from Omar.

Things change, and so do children. Come back to this reflection in three or six months. Your previous answers won't be saved (we don't keep that data), but the reflection itself takes 10 minutes and gives you a fresh read on where things stand.

If you'd like to think about your own wellbeing alongside your child's, the Holistic Health Assessment for adults takes about 15 minutes and uses the same six-pillar framework calibrated for adults.

Take the adult assessment

Thank you for taking the time to reflect on your child's wellbeing. Whatever this reflection surfaced, the fact that you're paying attention puts you well ahead of where most families ever get. With duas for your wellbeing, Omar.

This reflection is not a clinical assessment. It is a starting point for your own thinking about your child's wellbeing. It is not a diagnosis, prognosis, or treatment plan. The information here is general and educational. Every child is different, and a pattern that fits one child may not fit another. If anything in your child's wellbeing concerns you, your GP is the right first point of contact.

Data: We capture your email (for the newsletter) and your first name only. We do not capture your child's name, age, date of birth, school, NHS number, or any clinical information. Your reflection answers are processed to generate this page and are not stored. The newsletter list is run on EmailOctopus with UK GDPR compliance.

About this tool: Created by Omar at muslimhealthexpert.com. The reflection draws on NHS, RCPCH, UK Chief Medical Officers, BIMA, JBIMA, the Yaqeen Institute parenting research, and the work of internationally recognised holistic health practitioners. Full bibliography available on request.

Concerns or feedback? Email info@muslimhealthexpert.com.