Monday, September 22, 2025

The Mirror of Consciousness



The Mirror of Consciousness

By Kenneth Schmitt

Post on September 22, 2025


Maya stared at her reflection in the bathroom mirror, cataloging every perceived flaw with surgical precision. At thirty-two, she had convinced herself that her best years were behind her, with her body too soft, her mind too slow, her dreams too foolish. The voice in her head, so familiar it felt like her own, whispered its daily inventory of limitations: You're not smart enough for that promotion. You're too old to start over. No one could love someone as flawed as you.

She didn't recognize these thoughts as prison bars she had constructed around herself. In her world, everyone seemed to accept that dreams were for the young, that bodies inevitably lost vitality, that love was rationed and rare. Few dared to imagine anything different, and Maya had never been one to swim against the current of collective resignation.

The turning point came during a particularly brutal day at work. Her colleague. Sarah, a woman Maya had always envied for her apparent confidence, broke down crying in the break room. "I'm terrified," Sarah confessed. "Every day I wake up afraid I'm not enough, that everyone will discover I'm a fraud." Maya realized with startling clarity that she was looking into a mirror, not of her appearance, but of her inner state. The judgment she'd been directing at Sarah's "arrogance" had been a reflection of her own self-criticism.

That evening, something shifted. Instead of her usual mental assault, Maya found herself asking a different question: What if these thoughts aren't truth, but just habits? She began to notice the weight of her negativity, how it felt like carrying stones in her chest. When she observed without judgment, she could almost sense the heavy vibration of her despair, thick and sluggish like mud.

The next morning, as an experiment, Maya tried something radical. Instead of beginning her day with the familiar litany of inadequacy, she paused and imagined what it might feel like to wake up in a body she loved, with a mind she trusted, surrounded by opportunities rather than obstacles. The feeling was so foreign it almost frightened her—but beneath the fear was something extraordinary: a lightness, an energy that seemed to lift her from within.

As days passed, Maya began to understand what she was experiencing. When she held thoughts of love and possibility, her entire being seemed to vibrate at a higher frequency. She moved differently, spoke differently, even looked different. People at work began responding to her with more warmth and respect. She realized she wasn't just thinking differently—she was living differently.

The real test came when her mother visited, armed with her usual arsenal of criticisms about Maya's life choices. Instead of absorbing the negativity and turning it inward, Maya felt something remarkable happen. She could sense the pain beneath her mother's harsh words, the same fear and limitation that had once trapped her. Rather than defending or attacking, Maya responded with genuine compassion. "Mom, you've always been so afraid of not being enough," she said gently. "But you are more than enough."

In that moment, Maya felt the compassion she offered flow back to her like a warm current. She understood now that every kindness she extended to others was a gift she gave herself, just as every judgment had been a wound she'd inflicted on her own spirit. She had seemed separate from the world around her, but now she was both the artist and the canvas of her experience.

Months later, Maya barely recognized her former self. She had started the art classes she'd always wanted to take, her body had responded to her new self-love with vitality and strength, and she found herself surrounded by relationships that reflected the love she now knew came from deep within. She hadn't changed the external world so much as she had aligned with what had always been possible.

Standing before the same mirror where her transformation began, Maya smiled at her reflection. She had become the master of her own life by remembering what she had always been. Beneath the layers of limiting beliefs about herself. She was infinite consciousness experiencing itself through the beautiful, temporary form of Maya. That truth radiated from every cell of her being.

In choosing love over fear, expansion over limitation, she had freed herself and had become a beacon for others still trapped in the prison of their own making, showing that freedom had always been in their own realization.

Kenneth Schmitt
Click above for more on Kenneth web page.
 

 

Compiled by http://violetflame.biz.ly from: 

* replacing rayviolet11.blogspot.com/ blocked on 2025/07/23 due post  "RussiaGate, PedoGate, and Panic in D.C. - All Playing Now!", see back up:  http://violetflame.biz.ly/cgi-bin/blog/view_post/1222363 (no problems of security from 2005)


 My notes: 

  • God the Source is unconditional love, not a zealous god of [some] dogmatic religions.
  • All articles are the responsibility of the respective authors.
  • My personal opinion: Nobody is more Anti-Semite then the Zionists.


Reminder discernment is recommended
from the heart, not from the mind
 
The Truth Within Us, Will Set Us Free. We Are ONE.
No Need of Dogmatic Religions, Political Parties, and Dogmatic Science, linked to a Dark Cabal that Divides to Reign.
Any investigation of a Genuine TRUTH will confirm IT. 
TRUTH need no protection.
 
Question: Why the (fanatics) Zionists are so afraid of any Holocaust investigations?
 

  



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Social Media:
 
Google deleted my former blogs rayviolet.blogspot.com & 
rayviolet2.blogspot.com just 10 hrs after I post Benjamin Fulford's
February 6, 2023 report, accusing me of posting child pornography.
(A Big Fat Lie) Also rayviolet11.blogspot.com on Sep/13, 2024, and again on July 23, 2025.

 
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