The Arabic word nafs (نَفْس) appears over 295 times in the Quran. It is one of the central concepts of Islamic anthropology — the word for self, soul, psyche, the inner person. Yet it is remarkably under-explained in English-language Islamic content, which means millions of Muslims carry this concept without a clear understanding of what it actually means for their inner life.
This article unpacks the nafs systematically — what it is, what its three Quranic stages describe, and how Islamic CBT uses this framework as a map for psychological and spiritual healing.
What is the nafs?
The nafs is best understood as the total inner self — the seat of desires, will, conscience, emotion, and spiritual state. It is not identical to the ruh (spirit), which is the divine breath Allah placed in Adam and whose full nature is known only to Allah (Surah Al-Isra, 17:85). The ruh is the divine constant; the nafs is the self that grows, struggles, and is shaped by choices.
Importantly, the nafs is not inherently evil. This is a common misreading. The Quran presents the nafs as a dynamic entity — capable of the lowest states and the highest, and everything in between. The task of a Muslim's life is not to defeat the nafs but to purify and elevate it.
قَدْ أَفْلَحَ مَن زَكَّاهَا وَقَدْ خَابَ مَن دَسَّاهَا
"He has succeeded who purifies it, and he has failed who instils it with corruption."
— Surah Ash-Shams (91:9–10)
The Arabic verb zakkaha — to purify — is the same root as zakat. The nafs is something you invest in, refine, and grow. This is the Islamic CBT project in one sentence.
The three stages of the nafs
The Quran identifies three distinct stages. They are not a fixed hierarchy that you ascend once — they describe recurring states that a person moves between, sometimes daily.
Surah Yusuf (12:53) — "Indeed, the nafs is a persistent commander of evil, except those upon which my Lord has mercy."
This is the nafs in its lowest state — driven entirely by impulse, desire, and the avoidance of discomfort. It does not reflect, does not self-examine, and does not consider consequences. It simply wants, and pursues what it wants. In modern psychological terms, this describes the dominance of automatic, unreflective cognitive and behavioural patterns — what CBT calls automatic negative thoughts and compulsive avoidance.
Surah Al-Qiyamah (75:2) — "And I swear by the self-reproaching soul."
This is the nafs that has developed a conscience — it acts, then reflects, then reproaches itself. It is aware of the gap between its behaviour and its values. Crucially, Allah swears by this nafs — not condemns it. The lawwama state, despite its discomfort, is a spiritual achievement. It means you have developed the capacity to see yourself honestly. Most struggling Muslims live predominantly in this state: they act from impulse, then feel guilt and shame about what they did.
Surah Al-Fajr (89:27–28) — "O tranquil soul, return to your Lord, pleased and pleasing."
This is the nafs at its most elevated — not perfect, not sinless, but at peace. It has integrated its desires with its values. It acts from principle rather than impulse. It meets difficulty without being overwhelmed by it. Tawakkul is not an effort at this stage — it is a natural disposition. The mutma'inna nafs is the therapeutic goal of Islamic CBT: not the elimination of negative emotion, but the development of a self that can hold difficulty without being destabilised by it.
The nafs is not a fixed state
This is the most practically important thing to understand about the three-stage model: they are not a one-way escalator. A person who has reached moments of mutma'inna can slip back into ammara patterns under stress, grief, or exhaustion. A person living predominantly in ammara can have moments of profound lawwama that become the turning point toward healing.
Ibn al-Qayyim described this as the ongoing war within the self — not a battle you win once, but a condition you manage with continuous attention. Islamic CBT takes the same view: treatment is not a cure, it is the development of skills and awareness that make the mutma'inna state more accessible and more stable over time.
How Islamic CBT uses this framework
In practice, Islamic CBT uses the three stages as a diagnostic and therapeutic map:
- Assessment: Which state describes your predominant patterns right now? Are you acting from impulse without reflection (ammara)? Are you reflecting but spiralling into shame (lawwama)? Or are you managing your responses with some stability (approaching mutma'inna)?
- Intervention: The movement from ammara toward lawwama requires building the muhasabah capacity — slowing down, noticing thoughts, creating space between stimulus and response. The movement from lawwama toward mutma'inna requires transforming self-reproach into tawbah: acknowledging, releasing, and moving forward rather than looping.
- Goal: The mutma'inna nafs is not a destination you reach and stay at. It is a quality of engagement with life — increasingly stable, increasingly values-led, increasingly at peace with what you cannot control.
"Truly it is in the remembrance of Allah that hearts find rest."
— Surah Ar-Ra'd (13:28)
This verse is the Quran's prescription for moving toward the mutma'inna state. Dhikr — remembrance — is not a passive activity. It is an active reorientation of attention away from the rumination and catastrophising that keeps the nafs in ammara and lawwama loops, toward the reality of Allah's presence and sovereignty. For more on how dhikr works clinically, see our article: Dhikr as Therapy: What Science Says About the Mental Health Benefits of Remembrance.
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Frequently asked questions
What is the nafs in Islam?
The nafs is the Islamic concept of the self or psyche — the inner dimension that encompasses desires, will, conscience, and spiritual state. The Quran describes three stages: the commanding self (ammara), the self-reproaching conscience (lawwama), and the tranquil self (mutma'inna). Islamic CBT uses these as a framework for understanding and treating emotional struggle.
What are the 3 stages of the nafs?
The three stages are: Nafs al-Ammara Bissou (the self that commands toward sin — driven by impulse, mentioned in Surah Yusuf 12:53), Nafs al-Lawwama (the self-reproaching conscience, mentioned in Surah Al-Qiyamah 75:2), and Nafs al-Mutma'inna (the tranquil, contented self, mentioned in Surah Al-Fajr 89:27–28). These are not fixed — people move between them.
What is the difference between nafs and ruh in Islam?
The ruh is the divine spirit Allah breathed into Adam — its full nature is known only to Allah (17:85). The nafs is the self or psyche that experiences, chooses, and grows. The ruh is the divine constant; the nafs is shaped by circumstances and choices throughout a person's life.
How does Islamic CBT use the nafs framework?
Islamic CBT uses the three stages as a map. The ammara describes automatic, unreflective patterns (CBT's cognitive distortions and compulsive behaviours). The lawwama is the muhasabah capacity — the ability to observe your own thoughts. The mutma'inna is the therapeutic goal: psychological flexibility and stable tawakkul. Treatment involves strengthening the lawwama capacity and gradually building the conditions for the mutma'inna state.