Psychological projection works the same way. We look “out there” at other people and the world, and it seems like something is happening over there. What we perceive as external is often an internal truth being broadcast outward. We are the projector; they are the screen.
As Byron Katie puts it: “You have never met anyone but yourself. You have never met another person, only your stories about them.” Your stories are your projections—what you are placing on other people.
Recognizing the Mirror
Conscious leaders understand they’re living in a hall of mirrors. At first, most people resist this idea. They want to make life about the other person. That’s natural. That’s normal. But when you open to the possibility that everything you see over there is really something in you…. you may have an “Oh shit” moment. “All of that is me? Really?” And if you’re like most people, you’ll recoil in disbelief and disgust.
But if you stay on the path of waking up, you’ll eventually come to a place of gratitude—even excitement. You’ll begin to see that everything you’re projecting onto others is simply a part of yourself you haven’t yet seen, owned, and accepted. Through projection, life gives you a streamlined, direct path to healing yourself and integrating all your parts into a cohesive whole.
From Reaction to Reflection: A Personal Story
I was triggered. I had the thought, “How can you be so self-absorbed? So self-referential?” I made up all kinds of judgments. From the state of my consciousness —below the line–it really did seem like it was about them..
Then I remembered: I’ve never met another person. Only myself.
So I chose to play the game: “What if they’re the screen and I’m the projector? What if what I see over there is really something in me? What if I’m seeing my own self-absorption, self-centeredness?”
Three Steps to Eating a Projection
Eating projections begins with curiosity. Ask:- Is this something I don’t yet see in me?
- Is it something I haven’t owned as me?
- Is it something I haven’t yet accepted or loved in me?
Almost always, I can find the part of me I’ve been projecting. In this case, I didn’t have to look far. Even while “listening” to them — I was absorbed in my own thoughts, judgments, and reactions. I was being self-referential, making it all about me and how they weren’t interested in me.
Welcoming the Banished Parts
None of us had perfect caregivers. Many were deeply well-intentioned, but all were wounded. They couldn’t love all our parts because they hadn’t loved all of theirs. This isn’t a problem. It’s part of the human journey.
Don't Forget the Positive Projections
When we admire–or envy– another’s creativity, power, confidence, insight, perseverance, resilience, love, or humility…we’re still looking at a screen. Those qualities live in us, too. We just haven’t seen, owned, or accepted them yet. Maybe we were told not to shine. To tone it down. To not be too much. So we split those parts off. But they’re still ours. And the process of reclaiming them is the same: See it. Own it.Accept it and love it.
What's Possible When You Eat Your Projections
Not by changing others….but by meeting yourself.
More
- Content vs. Context –
For more information on the value of paying attention to context as much as content check out this video.