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Perfectionism: Why B+ Work is Key to Healing

perfectionismPerfectionism is a sneaky little thought habit indeed. It keeps us running in a perpetual hamster wheel of self-doubt, self-loathing, and never enoughness. So what is perfectionism? And how do we know if perfectionist thinking is what’s driving us? How can we distinguish goal- setting, ambition, desire, passion for our work, from perfectionism?

Perfectionist thought habits and a perfectionist mindset is a topic I see in – let’s be real – pretty much everyone in my life. And it was very, very much a part of my everyday, though I didn’t recognize it. 

Perfectionism is a sneaky one and it can be super challenging to see in ourselves.

I saw myself as not being perfect. As if that was a thing. And in my head, a perfectionist did everything right ahead of time. Kept a perfect schedule and stuck to it, always looked impeccable and had the latest fashions on. 

But I didn’t call myself a perfectionist. That wasn’t me. Like, no way. I wasn’t perfect. What I’ve come to see by using the think-feel-act cycle tool that I teach you, by doing the thought work protocol with myself on the daily is that it’s my constant striving to be “perfect”? And at the same time, you are inherently perfect.

It was my constant striving, this constantly berating myself for not being perfect that is the evidence of perfectionist thought patterns in my life. How sneaky is that? I always thought, “Vic, you could be better. You could do better. You could produce more, always get that gold star, that A+.”

I would push myself to the brink and often beyond, particularly if someone else was waiting in line to approve of me and my work. I was constantly worried about what wasn’t perfect in my life. Self-critical, judging, harsh, yikes. And I wanted in this subconscious way, to always produce that A+ essay, to be the best hostess and produce the A+ meal, the A+ blog post, whatever, on and on.

This mindset, this thought habit cost me so much emotional and literal time and energy that I now see I could have been directing towards self- care, growth, pleasure, enjoyment. 

And here we are. The past is the past and it is unchangeable, and this process of pushing myself, striving, what the Buddhists would call grasping, was something I needed to go through, I needed to learn through, with, by, and here we are.

I have done so much work on my perfectionist mindset and my perfectionist habits, and I want to also say clearly and that I love thoughtful goal-setting. I love encouraging ourselves, cheering ourselves on, to do the next right thing and to take courageous action on behalf of our wildest dreams. Absolutely.

But the energy of encouraging is so different from the energy of striving, pushing to be perfect. And this is what I coach folks on all day. I love blowing my own mind by seeing just how much I can get done, and watching my clients do the same. But conflating meeting your goals and having to do it perfectly is the issue here.

And it’s that that can keep us feeling trapped, less than, paralyzed, fearful. 

One way to understand this distinction between being goal-oriented and getting things done versus being in a perfectionist mindset is to ask ourselves, with love, some pointed and perhaps challenging questions.

These questions can bring up heavy thoughts, uncomfortable emotions, and physical responses, and I want to remind you to ground yourself in your body, orient yourself to time and place, and remember that whatever may come is all just more information about your relationship to perfectionism.

The more the following questions bring up for you, the more likely perfectionism is part of your thought habits. And remember, we need this information if we’re going to work towards healing. And it’s not bad and you’re not bad if you have these thoughts. My darling, they’re just thoughts.

They’re just habits, and you can change them with self-love, positive self- regard, and gentleness.

My beautiful perfect angel:

  • Do you ever feel bad about yourself when you don’t achieve something in just that exact way you wanted? 
  • Do you avoid doing what you long to do because you feel you won’t just do it right? 
  • Do you worry that others will withdraw their care and love if you make a mistake?
  • Do mistakes make you feel like you’re not smart enough, worthy, good enough? 
  • Do you get angry, intolerant, frustrated, out of acceptance if others make mistakes? 
  • Do you judge others harshly? 
  • Do you pause to relish in your successes or do you move on with great speed to worry about your next task?
  • Do you feel like your world would be shattered if you failed, or if someone says negative things about you? 
  • Do you feel dread, anxiety, worry, stress if you have to learn or do something new? 
  • Do you ever feel like you’re just the summation of your production, of the things that you do and do and do all day long? A hamster in a wheel?

Well my beauty, if you answered these questions with more yes than no, then perfectionist thinking may be a habit in your life. 

A habit that’s easy enough to label as I’m just ambitious, I’m just goal-oriented, I’m just a hard worker. And I’ll talk about the ways that you can be all of these things that society applauds and that you can move towards your goal without perfectionist thinking.

Okay my nerds, let’s first explore what perfectionism looks and feels like in our thoughts, feelings, and actions, starting, like we do, with a definition. 

Perfectionism is a personality trait, characterized by a person striving for flawlessness and setting high performance standards, accompanied by critical self-evaluations and concerns regarding others’ evaluations.

I would also say that I’m not sure it’s a personality trait in that I’m not sure I sort of believe in that conceptually. I’m really much more interested in the framing of us humans as creatures who have thought habits and mindset habits. Because I feel that holds space for the possibility of change, and I believe in our ability to change.

Perfectionism can keep us spinning and spinning in these thoughts that we have to meet some unattainable goal in an unrealistic way. And this thought habit can really eff with your head, to put it scientifically that is.

And because the way you do anything is the way you do everything, perfectionism is rarely just found in one single solitary area of our lives, but rather because it’s a framework for how we think about ourselves and the world, it seeps in everywhere. If you’re in a perfectionistic mindset at work, you’re likely employing that same way of thinking that you’re not okay or wonderful or worthy or good just the way you are, that you need to be better or fixed and need to prove yourself and your worth in every area of your life.

And in this way, perfectionist thoughts can lead us to feel really bad about ourselves. Feel bad about the situations we encounter, to judge other people, and often judge them harshly because they’re not perfect either. 

We tend to find ourselves in a mindset or story in which all mistakes will lead to catastrophe and crisis.

When perfectionism is your norm, you may relentlessly compare yourself to others. You may constantly check and recheck your work, only to make yourself feel increasingly afraid of messing up. You may obsess about details that are frankly relatively insignificant and thus, you may find yourself putting off your work for fear of not doing it perfectly as you focus on these details.

Procrastinating, which leads to more beating yourself up and finding ways in which you aren’t perfect. Perfectionism also leads the human brain to find and focus on the most negative aspects of a situation. The toughest part of perfectionism is that it can keep us from trying new things, having adventures, reaching beyond what we already know for fear of not doing it well.

Perfectionism gets all tied up in an identity that’s defined by what you do instead of who you really are. 

Perfectionist thoughts can cause you to feel overwhelming sadness, frustration, isolation, even hopelessness. Because perfection in this framework, I will make a perfect product that 100% of people will like, I will make the most incredible perfect meal that 100% of my guests will adore, these sorts of things, they’re unachievable.

And the ironic thing is that when you believe you need to be perfect in order to be good, lovable, successful, the feelings your perfectionist thoughts create for you will feel less than perfect. They’ll be the ones we call negative feelings. So it’s common to try to stop them, to block them, to buffer against them, and to thus spiritually and emotionally bypass them.

By which I mean to not feel your feelings but rather, to work to muscle through or to jump to the next action to change the situation as though that will make you feel better. But the thing is the thoughts and feelings you resist persist. They don’t go away, my beauty. They stay in your mind, body, heart, and spirit, which can take such a painful toll on us.

All of this emotional overwhelm and cycling into denial can lead our human brains into even more destructive behaviors because feeling bad about yourself leads you to feel worse about yourself. 

Perfectionism often goes hand in hand with eating disorders, depression, anxiety, which all makes sense.

As your thoughts keep you trying to control the world, control your body, control food, be mean to you, criticize you, think less of you, and worry about the future and the risk of failure, which is a thing we love and we look for in this family. We love to fail. But this chronic perfectionist thinking can really hammer it into your head that failure is a bad thing.

Perfectionism can also lead to a kind of paralysis, avoidance, procrastination because taking action is too risky or it may lead to the opposite behavior, where we obsessively prepare and prepare, which keeps your brain trapped in fear and worry

Perfectionists not only feel this intense pressure to do everything perfectly. We also feel we have to appear that our perfection was achieved without any efforts. 

This deception, it’s like a borderline lying to yourself and the world. Hides your intense efforts, good works, and therefore hides who you, who we, really are.

Appearing that we didn’t put much effort into our achievements is the brain’s attempt to block us from feeling vulnerable, should someone not approve of the product we created. It’s also a way to attempt to block us from feeling, admitting that we may need help.

Often perfectionists feel deep shame and a lack of worthiness, which is why we try so hard to be perfect. Shame and perfectionism are a tightly- woven braid. The inner story goes, if only we could do things perfectly, we would feel valuable and worthy. We would know it and so would everyone else. Falling short of perfection, shame fills my heart.

Perfectionism takes a toll on your thoughts, emotions and your body. For example, say you’re worrying that a task you’re doing at work is wrong, that you’re making mistake after mistake. Your thoughts lock into this worry and you keep thinking, “I’m never going to do this right. I can’t believe I can’t get this right. What is wrong with me?”

Your shoulders start to seize up, your jaw is clenching, you need water or to pee, but you just can’t leave what you’re doing. All this strain, this pressure of your body, your nervous system is causing you to get a headache, and your belly is churning with anxiety, as being a feeling accompanied by and born from tension in our bodies.

Tension and thoughts of failure as a bad thing make you feel anxious. Anxiety makes you tense, worsening your muscle pain, inflammation, reducing blood and lymphatic flow, messing with your digestion. 

Perfectionist thinking can be the spark for this painful cycle, that can leave you in physical pain, emotional pain, with a belly ache or heartburn that won’t quit.

Not to mention the toll on your adrenals and thyroid gland, who respond as they’re meant to, when neurochemicals like adrenaline and cortisol that prolong your discomfort and suffering.

Sometimes to get relief, we end up avoiding working on the thing we need to do, all the while pressuring ourselves to get it done. When this happens, your smart brain will find a way to escape through buffering. We fall asleep or binge on junk food, or dive into a social media hole, and there’s this temporary sense of relief as our bodies are flooded with dopamine.

But then the dopamine and the relief stop and the panic and the fear come back twice as hard. In this scenario, we end up waiting until the very last minute to do what we need to do, and then you either stay up all night working and working and working, or sort of throw it together, doing a half- ass job and proving to yourself that you are inadequate and a failure.

You may be asking at this point, where does perfectionism come from? How did perfect become the framework in which you judge yourself, especially since being a perfect human isn’t really a thing, right? It’s impossible for any living mammal to do anything that 100% of the world is going to agree is perfect, no matter what we do.

Many of our beliefs are formed by our family of origin. From the earliest messages we received about our value and worth. Passive aggressive comments and criticisms, value being assigned to us only if we accomplish x, y, or z, impossible expectations to adhere to about what is right or wrong, perhaps at inappropriate ages, or shaming we may have felt when we made a mistake.

These may be the things that we heard as a little one, that seeped into our psyches. Later, these messages become the voices we use to talk to ourselves. Our inner self talk. Outer sometimes too. We often learn to pick up controlling, abusive, or unpredictable messages of you should have left off.

You should have gotten an A, you should have focused on your school work, you should have focused on athletics, you should be dating the right kind of person. You should wear a size zero, you should look, act, think, be a very specific way.

Our harsh judgments, our putdowns, our aggression towards ourselves can be so habitual we don’t even know we’re doing it. 

And codependency can play a big part in our developing perfectionist thought habits.

We can feel that we’re responsible for everyone’s happiness, and if everyone is not happy, then how can we be happy? We start to believe that this happiness or calm or ease is only secured if our behavior is perfect. If we do the right thing all the time.

Perfectionism is also taught in the cultures in which we live. 

The religious or moral beliefs we were brought up with, the socioeconomic class we come from, and if you’ve been socialized as a woman, feminism luckily has helped us to identify the specific ways that perfectionism shows up in our lives.

To be a good woman, we are expected to always be caring and considerate, put others first, defer to others, be vigilant and relentless about keeping to society’s standards of beauty, body size, and all of this is then augmented by capitalism, affecting humans of all genders.

Capitalism constantly tells us that there’s something wrong with us, and the best way to meet the standards of perfection are to buy products and potions and lotions and to focus on production over pleasure and joy. But if, and let’s be real, these products, this production fails to transform us, we fall further and further into our stories of failure.

And the way to tell if you’re dedicated to your goals and the results you want in your life, versus being stuck in a perfectionist mindset around them is to ask yourself, would it be okay if I failed at this? And here, I do mean failure in the best sense of the word.

Failure, as beautiful, magnificent evidence that you went for it, and that you can accept that things in life don’t always go as planned. Failure here meaning that you learn from the experience and move on. Not beating yourself up or obsessing. Just evaluating and taking courageous action to do the next right thing for your life.

I also know that I’m working towards a goal and result in a not-perfectionist way when I’m happy with B+ work. 

This has been very challenging in my life and the truth of it is B+ work is work that’s done. It’s out there in the world. It’s a tidy enough closet, it’s a good enough paper or memo. It’s a useful blog post that will help someone change their life.

B+ work is work that doesn’t drain your soul. It gets done. While striving, grasping for that constant A+ and perseverating on it, ruminating about it, wondering and wondering if it’s good enough or good enough or good enough, that’s your sign of perfectionist thinking.

Done, my love, is so much better than perfect. 

And get-it-done energy, B+ energy will get you much further with your self-love and positive self-regard intact, long before perfectionism ever will.  

I want to invite you to look at your thought habits in your life. Are you spinning around trying to match some unachievable concept of perfection? Are you procrastinating your work, your goals, your dreams? Are you living in tomorrow thinking? Meaning, I’ll get that done tomorrow, I’ll start that new nutrition plan to heal my gut tomorrow, I’ll start taking my supplements tomorrow, I’ll start doing thought work or future self journaling tomorrow.

These things can all be hints that your brain is buffering, pushing challenging emotions away because of your habit of perfectionist thinking. 

It’s really, really vital that you get a really clear sense of where perfectionism is showing up for you. So that’s your homework for this week. Focus there, not on changing your thoughts, your feelings, your actions, your results. Really on feeling into it.

Awareness is in and of itself healing, and awareness plus action, that is how you build the intentional life of your dreams. So let’s take it step by step. Let’s not do that perfectionist thing of trying to fix it all and solve it all. You’re perfect. That’s the funny thing here, right?

Perfectionism is predicated on this concept that you’re not perfect. My sweet one, you are already so perfect and you don’t need to prove that to anyone on this earth, especially not to yourself.

Thank you for taking the time to read Feminist Wellness. I’m excited to be here and to help you take back your health!

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Victoria Albina Breathwork Meditation Facilitator

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