Types of mutashabihat: location and direction
Mutashabihat can be classified by location, such as between verses or inside one verse, and by direction, such as one-way links or back-and-forth links between surahs.
How surah mindmaps and verse groups work together, and what happens when you edit the verse groups
Verse groups are the review-sized pieces that come out of your surah mindmap. When you edit them, Quran Life tries to keep what still makes sense and reset only what truly changed.
Create your own mindmap or use pre-built mindmaps?
The real choice is not only pre-built or fully custom. A very practical middle ground is to start from a pre-built mindmap and edit it into your own.
What daily load statistics are trying to show you
Daily load helps you estimate whether your current review pressure leaves room to add new work or whether doing so would quietly overload the next few days.
How Quran Life calculates your daily portion
Quran Life calculates daily portion by word target, then snaps it to meaningful boundaries, preferring surah ends and then rub and ruku markers before falling back to the nearest ayah stop.
How many daily portion cycles do you need before using rote memorization shortcuts?
For many people, about 2-3 daily portion cycles are enough before selective rote shortcuts start helping, though prior familiarity with the surah can change that a lot.
Daily portion listening vs reading
Listening and reading are not separate 'learning styles.' They are preferences, and in many cases the strongest daily portion comes from combining more than one sense at once.
Should you review every day? What the history of reviews actually teaches
Daily review is usually ideal, but not every missed day means failure. What matters more is the pattern your review history reveals over time.
How to use Quran parts in Quran Life
The normal progression is to start with the part you already know, then move gradually into parts you have not learned yet, and only switch to all-Quran mode once the whole Quran is in active maintenance.
Inside the mindmap editor: how the mapping tools actually work
Quran Life uses a tldraw-based editor that favors freehand mapping, but also gives you arrows, text, highlighting, and selection tools if drawing by hand is not how your brain works best.
Ignored, resolved, and custom mutashabihat: what Quran Life is really tracking
Quran Life is mainly trying to distinguish between similarities you want to ignore, similarities you really resolved, and custom similarities that matter because your own mind keeps connecting those verses.
Why mutashabihat should unlock when the verse is relevant, not all at once
Quran Life does not try to activate every mutashabihat pair globally. In practice, it becomes actionable when it has surfaced in your active review workflow and at least one relevant comparator is already learned enough to be useful.
What to do with the surah that keeps producing the most mistakes
The surah with the most mistakes is not always your weakest surah. Often it is simply the one being stress-tested most honestly.
Should you suspend only the mindmap or both the mindmap and the verses?
Quran Life gives you two complete-exit behaviors: suspend only the mindmap, or suspend both the mindmap and the verse reviews. The right choice depends on whether your verse groups can still be trusted on their own.
Suspended, similarity, or mindmaps: what should you prioritize in your todo?
A simple priority order usually works best: finish the mindmap work that gives structure, then fix suspended verse groups, then handle similarity cards that depend on that structure.
Why Quran Life hides the verse before showing it
The verse is hidden first so recall is tested before recognition takes over, and once revealing begins it happens in small contextual chunks rather than one large block.
What review order should you choose, and when?
`Due Date (Reviewed First)` is the default mode for new users and the generally preferred mode. The other review orders are there for cases where you need a different kind of flow.