3rd Reflection on Love: Finding a Love That Mirrors You
Why finding the right fit is more than just a proverb.
In the first reflections, we explored two difficult truths:
that loving also means accepting suffering,
and that loving is also preparing to lose.
This third reflection continues that path — not to discourage love, but to help us approach it with more honesty and self-respect.
It asks a quieter, but essential question:
What kind of love can I live without betraying myself?
3rd Reflection on Love: Finding a Love That Mirrors You
Another truth about love is the necessity of finding a love in your own image. I know many will disagree with me, and that’s okay. My goal isn’t for us to share the same opinion, but for us to take the time to reflect together.
In Haiti, there are many proverbs steeped in wisdom. One of them says: “Achte soulye ki mezi pye w.” Which translates to: “Buy shoes that fit your feet.”
When I speak of finding a love in your own image, I am not referring to physical appearance. To me, the physical is not what matters most. Everyone has their preferences—I do too—but these are personal. They should not become absolute criteria or be imposed on anyone else. As Ecclesiastes says: “All is vanity.” The body itself does not escape this truth.
Finding a love in your own image means loving in alignment with your identity, your worldview, and your deepest values. It is loving without betraying yourself, without distorting who you are to please another. It is knowing what you hold within, what you can offer, without losing yourself along the way.
I see it often: men sacrificing themselves to the point of exhaustion, working themselves to death to meet a woman’s needs, only to be betrayed or abandoned in the end. And women, for their part, giving everything to please a man: efforts, sacrifices, compromises—sometimes even breaking ties with family or friends. And in the end, what have they received in return? Nothing but suffering.
I am not saying one should never sacrifice for someone they love. I am simply asking this: is it the right person?
Is it a balanced love if a woman demands expensive gifts that the man cannot afford?
Is it a just love if a man asks his partner to abandon her studies, her career, or her passions just to stay by his side?
Is it a balanced love if someone who desperately wants to have children enters a relationship with someone who absolutely does not?
If love is like a liquid, and I have the power to give it any shape I want, this also applies to every human being. A woman may love a life of luxury and desire a partner capable of sharing that lifestyle with her. I can love that same woman as much as I want, and that takes nothing away from me. But if she wants a man who can offer her everything she desires, that is her right. I cannot, nor should I, impose my vision of love upon her.
Very often, we end up adapting to the other person’s vision, and in doing so, we end up forgetting ourselves. If I cannot offer her what she wants, I might be tempted to sacrifice myself to please her. But this sacrifice would breed suffering—for me, above all.
The simplest way to avoid this suffering is to not enter into a relationship with that person if I cannot offer what they expect, and especially if they are not able to accept me as I am.
This, in my view, is what it means to find a love in your own image. It is knowing yourself, being aware of your strengths as well as your limits, knowing where you are in life, what you want, and what you seek. It is meeting someone who loves and accepts you for who you are, for what you can offer, without asking you to sacrifice yourself to please them.
It is finding someone whose vision of love is similar to yours, or at least capable of coexisting with it. Someone who respects you for who you are, for what you represent, for your values, and not just for what you can provide.
And I believe that therein lies a seed of wisdom.
🪞 Reflection for the Week
Ask yourself, gently:
In love, where have I been adapting in ways that quietly cost me myself?
What part of who I am do I keep minimizing to be chosen or kept?
If I stopped trying to fit someone else’s vision, what kind of love would I actually be available for?
There is no right answer here.
Only honesty.
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And if this reflection resonates, share it with someone who might need to see themselves more clearly.
With clarity,
The Mirror Room
Odel A.



That proverb, “Buy shoes that fit your feet,” hit me right in the ribs. Like, yeah. No shrinking, no performing, just walking in what fits. I had to sit with that for a minute.
This is a powerful reflection on love and self-identity. The idea of finding a love that aligns with your own image, values, and worldview is truly thought-provoking. It’s important to remember that while sacrifices in a relationship are natural, they should never lead to losing oneself.