Thanks For The Art Contributions
Smaller mirrors will always be looking at a bigger one and see their own reflection in it. How small theirs is and what makes them up, behind it. They think they’re seeing the other person, but really they’re seeing their own wholeness, whether they see it, acknowledge or accept, without realising they’re seeing their whole life mirrored back. Past, Present and Future.
Fooling themselves into thinking what they’re witnessing is someone else. This can happen at any time, based on one’s depth and the depth of the one in front of you. The more the depth of the person in front of you grows, the more of you gets seen. They just have to focus on growing.
Geometry and mathematics is life applicable and translate-able. I wasn’t good at it for nothing. I gave up at limited frames of what it could be and saw it in all things.
I take inspiration from people’s reflections, as they see it as a waste or mine. More fuel to me, thank you for not seeing yourselves. I made great art out of it and a bigger cinematographical project thanks to it, to give to Consciousness at large.
When consciousness brings someone in front of a mirror, the exchange is never neutral.
It can be devastating.
It can be elevating.
Sometimes it is both at once.
What makes the difference is not the truth being shown —
it is the size, depth, and intensity of the mirror doing the reflecting.
Not all mirrors are equal.
A small mirror does not lie —
it is simply limited by what it can hold.
It can only show fragments.
It can only reflect pieces.
It can only return what fits within its narrow frame.
A larger mirror, however, does not just show your face.
It shows what is behind you.
It shows who stands with you in your reflection.
It shows what you are carrying, where you’ve been,
and the cause-and-effect of the energies that orbit your life.
A larger mirror reflects context.
A smaller mirror reflects fragments.
This is not about superiority.
It is about capacity.
Fragmented Mirrors Create Fragmented Perception
People who live fragmented lives tend to mirror in fragments.
Not because they want to distort truth —
but because their own embodiment is incoherent.
Their:
- emotional life is disconnected from their thinking
- their thinking is disconnected from their values
- their values are disconnected from their actions
- their actions are disconnected from responsibility
So when they look at another person,
they don’t see a coherent being.
They see parts.
They see moments.
They see isolated behaviours.
They see snapshots without narrative.
They then mistake their limited reflection
for the other person’s reality.
This is where projection begins.
When someone carries cracked lenses,
they assume what they see is cracked too.
They believe the person in front of them is fragmented,
when in truth the fragmentation lives in the mirror they are using to see.
Broken Mirrors Project Fracture onto Wholeness
A broken mirror doesn’t just reflect less —
it reflects distorted.
Cracks in perception create:
- misinterpretation
- false conclusions
- fragmented judgments
- incoherent narratives about coherent beings
This is why whole people are often called “too much” by those with small mirrors.
Not because the person is too large —
but because the mirror cannot hold their size.
Not because the person is incoherent —
but because the mirror fractures coherence into pieces.
Not because the person is dangerous —
but because the mirror reveals truths the viewer cannot yet integrate.
So instead of expanding the mirror,
many people attempt to shrink the reflection.
They call the mirror “harsh.”
They call the reflection “intense.”
They call the truth “threatening.”
But the truth is simpler:
The mirror is simply showing more than they are able to carry.
Larger Mirrors Are Not Kinder — They Are Clearer
A bigger, deeper, energised mirror does not soften reality.
It exposes more.
That is its nature.
It reflects:
- your direction
- your contradictions
- your blind spots
- your alliances
- your patterns
- your self-deceptions
- your coherence
- your incoherence
Not as punishment.
As information.
This is why people react so differently when confronted with consciousness mirrors.
Those who are ready for growth experience expansion.
Those who are protecting their fragmentation experience devastation.
The mirror does not change.
The receiver’s capacity determines whether the encounter becomes liberation or collapse.
The Mirror Does Not Create What It Reveals
A mirror does not invent your reflection.
It shows you what is already present.
If what you see is confronting,
it is not because the mirror is cruel —
it is because the truth you are meeting has outgrown the structures you used to survive.
This is where the choice appears:
- expand the mirror
- or attack the reflection
Most people choose the second
because it preserves the size of their world.
But those who choose the first
outgrow their old mirrors entirely.
The Cost of Standing in Front of a Large Mirror
Being reflected by consciousness is not gentle.
It is honest.
It does not meet you at the level of comfort.
It meets you at the level of what is real.
And reality, when finally seen whole,
does not negotiate with fragmentation.
It invites coherence.
You can step into that invitation.
Or you can call the mirror the problem.
The mirror will remain what it is either way.
Because mirrors of consciousness are not built to protect illusions.
They are built to reveal wholeness.

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