Seeking perfection in people, places and experiences is doomed to fail and may be a neurotic way of coping that came from childhood insecurity or abandonment. And the way we criticize or judge others as well as our experiences affects our mood and general level of happiness and serenity. Once we can watch the way we react out of this perfectionism life can become more spacious and less rigid.
Today I was guided to this meditation by Tian Dayton on accepting imperfection, finding peace and learning about why we or others act in rigid, controlling ways. Seeking to find ways to solidify our experience as well as justifications for the way we react in order to feel less uncomfortable may help us to grow and change some of those patterns. I hope you get something from this reading.
Leaving Perfectionism.
Today, I know that I need not like everyting about someone to enjoy them in my life. As a child, I may have felt defective in some fundamental way. No matter what I did to improve myself and love those around me, the situation only got worse. This made my self esteem drop and my drive toward perfectionism increase, I could not relax and let myself be who I was and other be who they were. I was worried that it would not be good enough. This has made me picky and judgmental, both with myself and with those close to me. I have trouble tolerating small infractions – I want things to be perfect. Today I recognize that perfectionism is an illusion, that learning to accept people as they are, myself as I am and life one day at a time brings the safety that used to think control would bring.
I let go of my need for perfection
Striving to be better, we oft mar what’s well.
There are many questions one might want to ask themselves. One, where did this ideal of perfectionism comes from. Is it truly our own value or something that was passed onto to us? To me perfectionism is linked to expectations and in my case I found life a lot easier once I dropped my expectations and rather allowed myself to be surprised. It eliminated disappointment and perhaps even the strive for perfection. In myself and others. Kind of like live and let live. And judgement becomes softer as well. πππΌ
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It comes from fault parental mirroring when the totality of us is not accepted and loved, I believe but we can change our expectations as you have. Sending love β€
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Much appreciated and much love returned to you. πππΌ
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I agree, perfection is esoteric.
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Truth KK. π¦ππ
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I relate so well to that line about we find the peace we were searching for once we LET GO of that perfectionist striving.
My own perfectionism seems driven by anxiety. My brain seems to think if I donβt do my very very best to be perfect then I will FAIL or something horrible will happen and I will be responsible.
Iβve tested that more recently and found itβs not true. Like you shared here, a lot of my own struggling internally and externally were linked to my perfectionism trait not due to a lack of perfection!
Take a lot of practice to retrain the brain though. And I do enjoy putting my heart and effort into thing, but then that feels good not anxiety driven. π
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Im.the same. I get myself un such a state when things are messy or I’m.just human. Yes, it good to bit our positive energy to use to make things beautiful or to expend valuable creative energy. but only as you say when that doesn’t lead to anxiety
.
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this spoke to me Deb! It was great! xoxo
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Thank you sweetie sorry I missed your comment earlier. Sending you love β€οΈ
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No worries Deb, love going right back to you xx
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Thanks hon.. needed it today. π
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