@Radget,
I am a little unsure what you mean by 'light reflections'
I presume that you are aware that a thermal camera cannot actually 'see' visible light and the MSX visible camera produces outline detail only.
Thermal cameras see thermal energy, so if an object is reflective at thermal wavelengths it will actually show you THERMAL reflections. Most commonly this is reflections of sources of heat like radiators, fires, Tungsten/Halogen light bulbs or even yourself. You are a 37C thermal projector and your own body heat reflects off of reflective objects. Be aware that a thermal reflector can take many forms and does not necessarily look reflective at visible light wavelengths. A shiny surface such as a whiteboard, many metal surfaces and even gloss paper act as thermal 'mirrors' when observing a scene. As an experiment......use your thermal camera to look at yourself in a Mirror. Then do the same using a plain glass window. The mirrors silver reflective surface is not 'in play' in this test.....the reflectivity occurs at the surface of the glass and does not need a reflective coating on the rear to work at thermal wavelengths. Glass is opaque at thermal wavelengths.
Do not take this as any sort of criticism or negative comment, but you need to read some books on the use of a thermal camera in order to understand what is actually happening in the image that you are viewing via the camera. Thermography is a very different world to that of visible light and needs to be interpreted correctly in order to make sense of the scene and what it is telling you. This is important when looking at houses as you can get some pretty odd results due to the various materials used and their physical properties. A Thermographer is trained to interpret the images and understand the limitations of the technology. Emissivity is a key element of thermography and a failure to understand its importance renders the Thermal camera little more than a toy in such hands. As I say, no criticism of you here....your experience is VERY common and you will quickly understand why you get these odd/distracting results once you have read some of the freely available training material available from FLIR and via the internet.
Hope this helps.