Group Hero

Divorced Muslims

social.group.members

Share your experiences, find support, and seek guidance. Connect, heal, and find strength in the company of those who understand our journey.

Share group

Looking for good women my whtsapp +21622539682

Share

Assalam aleikum warahmotullah
Before you unmatch cuz your text was ignored wait for like a week, the person might not be online or probably lost his or her phone or might be in some unexplainable situations. Don't be too quick to conclude

Share

Good Morning ☕
You are my today and all of my tomorrows.

social.contentViewer.likes
Share

ng distance relationships... a beautiful romance or just a huge headache? be honest

social.contentViewer.likes
32
Share

Narcissistic Traits: A Spiritual Lens (Self, Ego, and Awareness)

  1. The Ego as the Central Driver

From a spiritual perspective, what is often called “narcissistic behaviour” is understood as strong ego identification. The person is deeply attached to self-image, recognition, and control. Actions are guided less by awareness and more by the need to protect or inflate the ego identity.

  1. Illusion of Separation

Spiritual traditions often describe harmful behaviour not as a “mission to destroy others,” but as a state of separation from inner awareness and empathy. When someone is fully identified with ego, others are perceived through comparison, threat, or utility rather than shared humanity.

  1. Mirroring and Projection

Behaviours such as imitation, copying, or competitiveness are interpreted spiritually as projection and mirroring. The individual unconsciously absorbs traits from others because the ego is unstable and seeks identity externally. This is not necessarily strategic; it is often unconscious adaptation.

  1. Conflict as Inner Fragmentation

What appears externally as manipulation or control can, in this lens, be understood as inner fragmentation expressed outwardly. When a person is disconnected from self-awareness, their behaviour becomes reactive—shaped by insecurity, fear, and the need for validation rather than deliberate harm.

  1. A Higher-Level Understanding

The spiritual view does not reduce behaviour to “good” or “evil” intent, but to levels of awareness. Harmful patterns are seen as expressions of unconsciousness rather than a purposeful desire to destroy others. The focus shifts from labeling individuals to understanding the state of consciousness from which actions arise.

social.contentViewer.likes
1
Share

Looking for a divorce women

social.contentViewer.likes
Share

Salam

social.contentViewer.likes
Share

Let your smile change the world, never let the world change your smile.

social.contentViewer.likes
2
Share