Does it ever feel like nothing is ever good enough? No matter how diligent and consistent you are in your pursuit of a goal you never feel like, “Today I did really well!”
Yes me too! I crush myself when I under perform, and when I do fulfil a goal which I have set, I feel as if “well I should be meeting that standard in the first place”.
Recently, however, I met somebody on my travels who read my blog and picked up on the ‘perfectionist’ tone in some of my blog posts. See if you can spot that here as well!
As a result, I did some research, and wow! It all started to make a little more sense. The constant shame and guilt over my performance, and my own inability to feel good for things I have achieved leads to an overwhelming sense of insecurity in most areas of my life.
From this perspective it is very bad but… I can push myself soo hard. In this way it is both a blessing and a curse.
After researching this topic, I have realized that I do not want to remove my perfectionism. It is part of who I am. I just want to tame it – still pushing myself but also able to take a step back, able to treat myself like I would a loved one – kind and understanding, but firm and honest…
So lets get into it!
What is Perfectionism?
Oxford dictionary – the fact of liking to do things perfectly and not be satisfied with anything less
APA Dictionary of Psychology – The tendency to demand of others or of oneself an extremely high or even flawless level of performance, in excess of what is required by the situation. It is associated with depression, anxiety, eating disorders and other mental health problems.
For me, it is the constant need to be amazing at everything. All my social interactions have to be perfect. My guitar playing has to be sublime. I should always be kind. I should always be happy.
It is these totally rigid, extreme and most often impossibly unattainable expectations which we impose on ourselves and others which characterise perfectionism. Any deviation from this leads to harsh criticism towards ourselves and others.
What does all of this lead to?
Perfectionism is a Barrier to Confidence
We only feel good when we perceive ourselves to have done something extraordinary. Achieving something that others have attained, such as getting a degree, is not enough. Moreover, If we do not complete the task as hoped it re-asserts those pre-existing insecure feelings we have. When we make a mistake, we go down a rabbit hole of self mutilation, reminding ourselves of other times we messed up. The expectations we place upon ourselves are sky-high, unrealistic and sometimes impossible. We set ourselves up to fail.
It is like trying to impress somebody, but every time you think you have done something amazing, it is still unimpressive, there is some flaw or they say well, “you should be achieving that anyway!”
Unable to develop our self esteem, it is near impossible to create an internal security in who we are.
Any confidence we have is insecure, only present when we very rarely meet the unrealistic expectations placed on ourselves.
Not a confidence which is secure in itself, present even when we may fail.
Perfectionism leads to Procrastination and Avoidance
The anxiety associated with failing means we are unable to tackle even simple tasks surrounding our goals.
We cannot cope with being bad at anything, we expect only perfection immediately, regardless of whether we have only just started or not, if there is not a certainty that an activity will go perfectly it can seem as if there is no point trying at all.
This is a paralysing fear that can prevail, paralysing us. Preventing us from pursing our goals.
I notice this with my guitar practice – I apply sooo much pressure on my self to be amazing, I do not patiently learn the basics, skipping to try and play things out of my ‘range’ because of this desire. This leads to frustration as it is to hard for me, I then beat myself up over this because I feel like I am bad.
As a consequence of this, there is so much guilt, shame, frustration and anxiety associated with the act that it is no longer enjoyable 🙁
So I procrastinate, beating myself for avoiding the task and the cycle continues…
As you can probably guess…
Perfectionism can Lead to Mental Health Issues
Many of the ‘symptoms’ of a perfectionist are analogous to that of depression, such as spirally guilt, low self worth and a tendency to avoid and disengage with reality.
Thoughts loops such as; ‘I am a loser, I am useless and a failure!’
As a result, being a perfectionist can put you at a higher risk of suffering from depression
Many studies show this such as this one
Additionally, I suffer from social anxiety. Which stems from a need for every social interaction to go perfectly, a need to be perceived in an overwhelmingly positive light by others. You could say that social anxiety is a kind of ‘interaction perfectionism’. Just made that one up!! Here is a study linking social anxiety to perfectionism.
So then, what can we do about it?
Be Conscious of Your Thoughts
We barrage ourselves with self criticism whenever we fail or make a mistake. Notice these thoughts as they arise. Do not push them away but let them sit.
Take a step back and try to look at your thoughts objectively and ask whether it is beneficial to continue to think in this manner.
And then…
Find the Nuance…
Say to yourself, “okay well maybe this did not go as planned.” But… “I did such and such well…”
At the moment this is what I am trying to do with social anxiety. For example this is what I wrote in my dairy after a social event at a hostel the other day.
Treating situations objectively, and judging them as you would say an exam paper at school…
What went well
What did not go so well
What can I improve upon next time
So instead of beating myself up, I am being more mature with my thoughts and I am impartially evaluating, being kind and giving constructive feedback to myself.
Caring for myself just as I would a loved one… Which does not come naturally!
Give Yourself a Pat on the Back
So you achieved something that in your perfectionist mind is only a mediocre. Something that everyone else seems to do easily that you only just learned. You actually did everything which you set yourself
You can still say, “well done!”
“Good job”
This is what I am trying to do at the moment. When I learn a new song, however easy, on the guitar I try and let myself feel good for it and you know what I am actually starting to enjoy playing again…
Allow Yourself the Freedom of Being Shit
Be awful at something, I know it is not fun and your perfectionist brain forbids it.
Let go of control and acquiesce to the god of shitness! I have been doing this recently and it is sooo freeing!!
Accept your flaws for what they are and present a bad first draft of yourself
So often have I missed out on life being I am afraid of being shit, avoiding talking because I fear I will be awkward, avoiding practising the basics on guitar because in my own head I am a guitar god (so stupid!)
At the moment I am trying to work on my social anxiety and social skills. You can read my latest travel post here. I am going and talking to people, accepting that it will not go perfectly, I will be awkward.
I am trying to welcome my imperfections, receiving them and working to improve just a little every day.
Leading to…
Do Something!
You are always a fool when you start something new
If you never start anything new, you will never challenge yourself, never attain new skills and hence never develop.
There is a quote from Jung which I like for this:
“The perpetual hesitation of the neurotic to launch out into life is readily explained by his desire to stand aside so as not to get involved in the dangerous struggle for existence. But anyone who refuses to experience life must suffocate his longing to live – in other words, he must commit partial suicide.”
I know now that being unskilled and inferior is the precursor to transformation.
And just do something, however bad you are at first…
Thanks for reading!!!
This has been a recent revelation which has really been changing things in my life recently. Giving myself the freedom to be bad and being objective about my mistakes has made me experience more hope in my life.
It all started when I did a Muay Thai camp in Thailand. I was bad initially and I hated it. So I allowed myself to be bad and just worked on improving each and it was such a release.
I am trying to apply this same philosophy to every thing which I do.
Just working hard for incremental weekly improvements… Still pushing myself but trying to not beat myself up that I am not a master at everything!
Here are some of the sources I used to gather some of this information… here, here and here