So now that we understand that perfection is actually a whole and not just a partial experience, and now that we know that even attempting to understand perfection will require a great deal of struggle and difficulty, it begs the question: How can we look at the perfect mountain and start taking action on the climb, instead of standing at the bottom with shaky knees, unwilling to begin because we know it won’t be easy and that we will face many difficulties?
This is where most people get stuck, I believe—an unwillingness to suffer. A deep desire for everything to be easy. Taking action guarantees a difficult process, so let’s just procrastinate and not even start the journey because we don’t want to do something that takes us out of our comfort zone. We don’t want to do something that will be hard, that will bring criticism from ourselves and others, and that will push us to reevaluate ourselves—our strengths, our weaknesses, our good sides, and our bad sides.
Maybe people don’t want to see or understand their own shortcomings. People don’t want to consider themselves as a whole either. I think most humans believe that being a “perfect” person means doing good, being humble, being successful, and being kind. But again, I challenge this notion because I think a perfect person is a whole person. A whole person has many aspects and facets to their personality and behavior. A whole person is happy, kind, generous, successful, humble, sincere, and good—but also angry, broken, depressed, dark, complicated, egotistic, and selfish. A whole person has had many experiences that have shaped their personality, and they would not embody all that is light about themselves without also experiencing all that is dark.
You exist in duality, and there is always balance within. You will be equally as dark as you are light. Some will experience you as positive, while others will experience you as negative—and that is both good and normal because you are a perfect whole, not a broken half of only goodness. Make peace with your dark sides. Make peace with the fact that not everyone will like you, and you are not supposed to be a source of goodness in the lives of every person you encounter. For some, you will be darkness, and that is perfectly fine because that is what complete balance and wholeness are supposed to look like.
Consider the idea that you will criticize yourself more harshly for doing nothing than for taking action, trying, and failing. The “perfection” we seek is an inner journey of learning to understand, accept, integrate, and love every aspect of ourselves to shape the perfect whole that we are.
If you spend your whole life standing at the bottom of the mountain, looking up at everything you want to experience and achieve but never take the initial steps, you will hate and resent yourself and your life forever. It is impossible to have both an easy, relaxing life and feel fulfilled, happy, and complete at the same time. You need to overcome challenges to feel fulfillment. You need to suffer to understand what joy is. You need to bump your head and learn from many failures in order to achieve success on any level. If you are too scared to suffer, then you are too scared to live. If you are too scared to truly live life, you will continue to sit in a corner and blame the world for not dealing you an easy hand. You will remain the butterfly that never experiences the freedom of flight because it never had to face the struggle of life.
So how can we accept wholeness, fight against perfection, and overcome stagnation? The best advice I have is the advice that completely changed my own life two and a half years ago—the advice presented by James Clear in the book Atomic Habits, summarized in this wonderful video here. When I first watched this video more than two years ago, I finally started breaking free from my own inability to take action in my life. It all started with me immediately putting down cigarettes and quitting that awful 17-year habit that had destroyed my lungs, my skin, and my self belief.
In the book, James explains that taking action happens in the moment, in the now. If you want to change something in your life, learn something new, or do something different, you have to take immediate action today because tomorrow never comes. He recommends breaking it down into the smallest possible step and then creating small habits of taking daily action toward your goal. These small actions compound over time to create massive and notable changes in your life in the long term. The trick here is consistency. Decide what you want to do for yourself, and then, when you face the decision in the moment—whether to do or not to do—choose you. Choose you, again and again and again. Choose you consistently. It’s hard in the beginning, but when you do it again and again, it becomes easier every time. Before you know it, you’ve changed your habits, broken your addictions, and learned something new. Remember that the harder something is to overcome or break free from, the more you will learn and gain from the experience. The more you struggle, the stronger your wings will get.
Something I always tell my students when they tell me they want to be fluent in English is that they need to stop seeing fluency as the goal sitting at the top of the mountain. Instead, they should focus on making progress and taking steps. Stop seeing the goal as reaching the top, but see the goal as enjoying the total experience of the climb. My life coaching instructor once said a phrase that I love – "Practice doesn't make perfect, but practice makes permanent progress." Practice means you are taking steps, and taking steps means you are actively pursuing your goals instead of just procrastinating. Make Progress your ultimate goal, instead of considering perfection as something to reach for.
I know that another thing that often holds people back is the comparison to others. "I can't do it as well as they can, so why bother?" Maybe recognize that those people you are comparing yourself to also started as beginners. Everyone sucks when they begin something new. But those people put in a lot of time, effort, and energy to grow their ability, develop their name, and hone their skills. They consistently chose their own progress again and again until they reached the level they are at now, and they continue to practice all the time. Try not to compare yourself to others but rather use them as motivation. Think, "If I practice as much as they do, then with time, my skills can also reach that level." Let the amazing skills of others motivate and push you forward.
I think the last thought I can add here is to stop worrying about making mistakes. Failure is not failure unless it makes you stop trying. Mistakes generate feedback and experience, which are vital for growth. If you are not making mistakes, you are not pushing yourself very hard. When you make mistakes, it is a sign that you are stepping out of your comfort zone and really pushing yourself to improve and level up. Start to embrace and celebrate mistakes. They are the most valuable teachers.
Celebrate those small wins along the way. Set milestones, reward yourself for sticking to your habits, and keep going. This is how you break free from perfectionism and start moving forward.
"Ok, now just post the damn thing,” she says to herself as she finally completes the blog post that has been waiting for a month. Sending it off to be published as an imperfect piece of progress that is infinitely more valuable in that form than the post that will wait forever to finally be perfect before it can be good enough to be seen.
The image at the top of this post is another piece of my procrastination. A glass artwork that I started in 2020 after George Floyd was murdered, during the "Black Lives Matter" movement. I never completed it because the looming mountain looked like it was going to be too hard to climb. But now today, I am starting to work on it again. Even if I work on just one piece a day, I can have it finished by the end of the year. But if I don't start taking action, it will surely stay on my table for another five... The question is: What do I really want for myself and for my life? Do I want progress, or do I want stagnation? Do I want to move, or do I want to feel stuck? I create my reality every day through the decisions I make and the action that I take, and I am done standing still.
Hey Christine, thanks for sharing. What a huge step you've made in understanding what perfection is behind it! I really like the examples you illustrated in this article.
ReplyDeleteIt occurred to me that over the past two years, the biggest lesson I've learned is to accept myself—accepting my weaknesses, accepting that I am human. Once I accepted myself, I gained a lot of strength from that. I can write more easily, and I can build in public without feeling anxious...
You are such an inspiration Rolen! I always admire your strength and ability to do everything that you put your mind to.
Deleteim so proud of you ,,i see how brave you are!
ReplyDeleteThank you 🙏🏻✨ What you see in me, is a reflection of what you see in yourself!
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