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The Mirrors Meant to Teach You

The people who frustrate you the most might be God’s mirrors revealing what needs healing, refining, or forgiving. Pause, reflect, and let frustration become your teacher.

You’re in the middle of a busy morning, and your to-do list already feels longer than the day itself.

Then it happens…

You get an email from that coworker, the one who always finds a way to critique your work. You read it twice, take a deep breath, and feel that familiar wave of irritation building.

A few hours later, a friend calls. You pick up, hoping for a little encouragement. But five minutes in, it’s clear they’re not really listening. They just needed someone to unload on.

Later that evening, you’re at a family dinner, trying to unwind. But one tiny comment from someone who knows exactly how to push your buttons sends you right back into frustration.

You know that feeling?

Yeah. We all have those people.

The ones who frustrate us, drain us, or make us want to take a deep breath (or five) before responding.

But what if the people who frustrate you the most are actually the ones meant to teach you the most?

Frustration is a mirror, not a weapon.

Psychologists call it projective identification, meaning that the traits we can’t stand in others often reflect the parts of ourselves we haven’t made peace with.

Maybe that coworker’s constant criticism is showing you how much you still crave approval.

That friend who never listens might be a reminder of how deeply you long to be heard and understood.

And that family comment probably is revealing a wound you haven’t quite healed yet.

Your triggers are your teachers.


But that doesn’t make it easy, does it?

When someone offends you, it’s far simpler to blame than to reflect.

To say, “They’re the problem,” instead of asking, “What is this trying to show me about myself?”

It takes humility to hold up the mirror instead of the finger.

Jesus said in Matthew 7:3, “Why do you look at the speck of sawdust in your brother’s eye and pay no attention to the plank in your own eye?”

He wasn’t shaming us;  He was inviting us to grow.

Every reaction is a revelation.

So the next time someone tests your peace and patience, pause before reacting.

Take a breath.

And ask, “What is this revealing in me?”

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