Cognition
With this renewed perspective, when I stand before the mirror, I realize that it cannot reflect the whole truth of who I am. My true essence is not something that any mirror can capture. I no longer see myself as confined to one or several dimensions. Instead, I realize I have two levels of existence: one on Earth and one in heaven, which are interconnected. This realization gives me a sense of true cognition.
The mirror shows only the outer shell—the image shaped by time, culture, and circumstance. But now, I begin to sense that behind that image lies something vast, silent, and eternal. This deeper self isn’t limited by age, appearance, or even personality traits. It's connected to something higher—a divine intelligence, a spiritual origin.
This insight doesn’t make me reject my physical self, but it puts it in perspective. I start to live with a kind of inner vision, in a place where my daily life becomes more than a series of routines. I begin to notice the subtle guidance of my higher self, the quiet pull toward meaning, truth, and wholeness. I’m not just existing—I’m remembering who I really am.
In the quest of finding my “self”
in this world
Before this world
and after this world
Fatemeh Mirzaei Ahranjani
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