Mirrors, Hats & Finding Freedom in the Real You

Someone bought me a hat recently, it looked good but I had to try it on in front of a mirror before confirming if I liked it or not. Because it’s be honest, no one, and I mean no one, buys a hat without looking in the mirror first.

What’s interesting is, there were hats before mirrors were invented, which is kind of funny when you think about it. How on earth did people manage back then? Did they just trust their friend’s opinion? Rely on their reflection in a puddle? Hope for the best and walk around like, “Yeah, I know I look good”? (ha! sounds like me.)

Because let’s be real… today, before you even think about buying a hat, you’re standing in front of a mirror. Tilt to the left. Tilt to the right. Adjust the brim. Do the awkward head nod. Maybe even throw in the “let me squint and imagine myself on a beach” look. You’re not just buying a hat. You’re buying how you look in it.

And that’s the thing about mirrors: they remind us that so many of the choices we make aren’t just about function. They’re about image. About perception. About reflection.

A surprisingly large number of decisions in life come with mirror questions:

  • “What will my friends think?”

  • “How does this make me look?”

  • “Do I look like I’ve got it all together, or like I’m one email away from falling apart?”

We don’t just check the mirror when we’re trying on hats. We check it when we post on social media. When we buy the car. When we pick the job. When we show up to church. Even when we’re just living life, we’re secretly glancing over at the mirror, asking, “How’s this coming across?”

But here’s the problem: mirrors don’t always tell the truth.
The mirror shows you the surface. It shows you tired eyes but not the courage behind them. It shows you the outfit but not the backstory. It reflects the outside but doesn’t capture the inside. And if you’re not careful, you start living for the reflection instead of living from your reality.

And this is where God steps in with a mic-drop moment. Because while we’re obsessed with mirrors, God is looking at something deeper. The Bible says, “People judge by outward appearance, but the Lord looks at the heart” (1 Samuel 16:7).

And here’s the punchline that gets me every time: Jesus didn’t die for the version of you that you pretend to be. He didn’t die for the polished, always-smiling, never-struggling, Instagram-highlight-reel you. Jesus died for the real you—the messy, complicated, inconsistent, but loved-you.

That means you don’t have to keep performing for the mirror. You don’t have to bend yourself into shapes for approval. You don’t have to measure your value by how you look, how you come across, or how convincing your mask is. Because the cross already declared your worth, and the cross always tells the truth.

So yes, buy the hat. Please. Try it on. Adjust it in the mirror (so you don’t end up looking like that one uncle at a wedding who missed the dress code.). But remember: the mirror is not the measure. The reflection is not the reality. Your worth is not hanging on that angle, or that filter, or that friend’s comment.

The truth is this: hats will go out of fashion. Mirrors will fade. Opinions will change. But the person you are becoming in God? That’s eternal.

And that’s worth more than any reflection.