The Law of Attraction
- Danka Hajnovic
- Feb 27
- 3 min read

When we witness suffering in the world, it can be difficult to reconcile it with the law of attraction. How can such a law coexist with pain, injustice, and imbalance? The truth is, the law of attraction is not empathetic at all. It does not operate from a place of kindness or cruelty, fairness or unfairness. It is a mirror, reflecting back exactly what is present.
A mirror does not adjust itself based on how we feel. If we believe ourselves to be lacking, the reflection will confirm that belief. If we hold an expectation of hardship, life will reinforce that expectation. This is not because the universe is benevolent or malevolent. It is because it simply reflects what is.
This lack of emotional bias is what makes the law of attraction difficult to accept. We often want the universe to function as a loving parent, stepping in to shield us from pain and injustice. But the universe is not an authority figure deciding who deserves what. It is a mechanism of pure reflection.
Why Do We Struggle With the Law of Attraction?
We struggle because, deep down, we seek fairness. We want to believe that suffering has meaning, that the innocent are protected, that justice prevails. But the universe does not distribute experiences based on fairness. It responds only to vibration. This is why two people can live wildly different realities even within the same system.
When we see systemic issues like racism, poverty, or violence, we ask, how could the law of attraction allow this? The answer lies in the fact that collective beliefs and patterns shape reality just as personal ones do. The injustices we see today often stem from energetic imbalances that have been in motion for generations, reinforcing themselves through belief, fear, and trauma.
This does not mean suffering is deserved. It means suffering is a reflection of unresolved frequencies. And this is where free will comes in. We are not powerless observers of this mechanism. We have the ability to become conscious of our patterns and choose a different reflection.

Some may wonder, if the law of attraction is impartial, why do we sometimes feel divinely guided away from danger? This is because we are not singular beings. We are multi-layered, carrying many fragmented aspects of ourselves. Some parts of us vibrate with safety and wisdom, while others resonate with fear and struggle.
When we feel guided away from harm, it is because a part of us is aligned with assistance. However, we are also simultaneously aligned with challenges, and this is why life often feels like a mix of both. True mastery comes from integrating all aspects of ourselves, ensuring that we are not unconsciously attracting what we do not consciously desire.
How to Work With the Law of Attraction Consciously
Recognize the mirror. Life is not happening to us; it is reflecting from us. Instead of resisting the reflection, we must observe it with curiosity.
Identify the suppressed parts. What we reject in ourselves shows up externally. For example, if we suppress laziness, we may find ourselves constantly surrounded by it in others.
Integrate, not resist. When we polarize too strongly against an aspect of life, we amplify its presence in our experience. True change comes from integrating, not fighting.
Use free will consciously. The law of attraction does not operate on morality, but we do. We can choose what we align with, be it justice, healing, or abundance.
The universe is not fair, nor unfair. It simply is. And while this can feel unsettling, it is also profoundly liberating. We are not at the mercy of fate. We are creators of our reflection. The more we embrace this truth, the more we step into our power to reshape the mirror, not through force, but through alignment.




Comments