The Mirror and the MRI
The mirror shows what you arrange to show.
The MRI shows what you did not know was there.
One instrument serves the self that performs.
The other serves the self that is.
The Mirror
Most of us have been trained, quietly and relentlessly, to become mirror-people.
A mirror, after all, is a practical thing. It tells us how we appear. It helps us calibrate the face we present before we walk out the door. It asks the same question every time: How do I look?
And so we learn to manage ourselves the way we manage our appearance. We adjust. We curate. We smooth out what is jagged, conceal what is uncertain, brighten what seems dull. We do this socially — Did that land well? Did they like me? We do it professionally — Did I seem capable? Did I hold the room? We do it spiritually — Did I seem at peace? Did I say the wise thing?
This is not dishonesty. It is survival. Many of us learned early that the safest way to exist in the world is to become very good at presentation.
The mirror has its uses. But something quietly dangerous happens when it becomes the primary instrument by which we understand ourselves. We begin to believe that the reflection is the truth. We begin to mistake how we appear for who we are.
And the soul — that deep interior place that tightens in certain conversations, that softens in genuine love, that knows before the mind can justify — the soul gets left on the other side of the glass. Observed. Never inhabited.
The MRI
An MRI does something entirely different.
It does not care how you’ve arranged yourself. It does not respond to the face you put on in the morning or the persona you’ve spent years carefully constructing. It passes through all of that. It looks at what is actually inside — the density of tissue, the flow of fluid, the presence or absence of things that should or should not be there.
You cannot perform for an MRI. You can only lie still.
And in the lying still, you are seen.
There is a kind of spiritual reckoning in this image. Because the deepest work of the interior life is not about improving our reflection. It is about submitting, humbly and without defense, to being seen all the way through.
This is what the contemplative tradition has always understood. The Desert Fathers called it the stripping of the false self. The mystics called it kenosis — the gentle, sacred emptying. Thomas Merton wrote of the true self hidden beneath all our performances, waiting quietly like a seed beneath winter ground. Celtic Christianity spoke of thin places — those moments when the membrane between what we show and what we are becomes transparent, and something eternal peers through.
The MRI asks not How do I look? But what is actually here?
And that question, honestly held, is the beginning of transformation.
The Locked Rooms
Here is an uncomfortable truth that the mirror will never show you:
The rooms you think are hidden are visible in the shape of your avoidance.
Every house has them — rooms you do not enter. Not because they are empty, but because they are too full. The grief that never finished. The anger that felt too large. The longing that seemed too vulnerable to admit. The failure that became the story you’ve organized your entire life around avoiding.
The people around you already sense these rooms. They have felt the subtle change in your energy when a conversation drifts near them. They have noticed what you never bring up, what you minimize, what you deflect with humor or busyness or sudden competence.
And here is what the spiritual tradition says about those locked rooms: they are not where your shame lives. They are where your most essential material waits. Every locked room, when finally entered with courage and a willingness to be seen, turns out to contain not chaos — but sorrow needing to be witnessed, not danger — but something deeply human, not emptiness — but the most real version of yourself, waiting with extraordinary patience.
Sacred Noticing — the practice of paying attention with the whole of yourself — is, at its heart, the practice of learning to see with the eyes of the MRI rather than the mirror.
Not to catalogue your flaws. Not to perform your healing. But to look, gently and without flinching, at what is actually here. To let yourself be seen by the One who has always seen you, and loved you, from the inside out.
What Changes
When we stop living at the mirror — when we stop curating our reflection and begin, slowly, to inhabit what is actually there — something shifts in the way we move through the world.
The footprint we leave becomes honest. You cannot easily perform when you are fully present to yourself. You may still make mistakes. You may still be reactive. But the trace you leave is genuinely yours — unmistakable, unrepeatable, carrying the signature of something that does not die.
People sense this. They receive not the managed version, not the performance, but the actual emanation of a soul that is present to itself — and therefore finally, fully present to them.
This is what love actually is. Not the appearance of warmth, but the warmth itself. Not the performance of peace, but peace that passes understanding — because it was never manufactured. It was found, in the deep interior places, by someone willing to be seen all the way through.
God, after all, does not use a mirror. God has always been the MRI.
Be still.
Let the instrument pass through you.
Do not arrange yourself.
Do not prepare your best angle.
Simply lie in the grace of being known —
all the way down,
all the way through..
Questions for Reflection
Where in your life are you most likely to reach for the mirror — to curate, adjust, or perform?
What is one “locked room” in your interior life that you sense is waiting to be entered?
When have you experienced the grace of being truly seen — not for how you appeared, but for who you are?
What would it feel like to be still, today, and let yourself be known all the way through?
A Closing Invitation
Uncross your arms. Let your face be soft.
You are not here to be impressive.
You are here to be present.
That is enough.
And has always been enough.
Copyright 2026 Michael J. Cunningham OFS
