Talk:What We See in a Mirror/@comment-32602006-20140223114624/@comment-11386456-20140223185221

Honestly, I like to leave things open to interpretation of the reader. Like the mirror putting itself back could actually be just in the narrator's mind, or the efforts that they take to get rid of the mirror are the delusion, and thus the mirror never actually goes anywhere. To me, the ending is meant to signify that the narrator is living in the crazy opposite world where people buy Soylent Green style meat from butcher shops knowingly and/or that the narrator is the psycho while his reflection is what we would consider to be normal. Either way, it's a twist that I can only hope is better than that of an M. Night Shyamalan movie.