Perfectionism

At its root, perfectionism isn’t really about a deep love of being meticulous. It’s about fear. Fear of failure. Fear of success.
— Michael Law

What is Perfectionism?

Most people understand a perfectionist as someone who likes things to be “just so” or someone who doesn’t like to make mistakes, or perhaps a person who isn’t satisfied with things being good, but wants them to be as good as it possibly can be - indeed perfect. While all of those descriptions might be relevant, perfectionism is basically viewed as a mindset and group of behaviours some may see as a personality trait that is set on having very high expectations and standards. This is most commonly applied to the person, himself or herself, and anything or person that the individual sees as being linked to him or herself. For example, the individual him or herself may have impossibly high standards for a project at work as well as perhaps having an immaculately clean car. Both being viewed as an extension of Self. However, this doesn’t have to be across the board, so a perfectionist may have specific areas that occur as exempt from the rest of their life being viewed as “perfect”.

Perfectionism at its core is dysfunctional in that it confuses the Self, the person as if it becomes the same as a task at hand. If you get a perfect score on a test to some it would be a triumph - it might illustrate perseverance or setting a goal and reaching it could be thrilling and exciting. For a perfectionist, a perfect score means you can take a deep breath, it means that momentarily, you are not being chased. And, if you had to really work to get that perfect score, it means you are still basically crap and must do better next time. Perfectionism isn’t about excellence, it isn’t even about perfection, it’s about not being as flawed as you believe you are and maybe being allowed to live another day. If that sounds extreme, it’s because it is. Perfectionism is not fun.

THE IMPACT OF Perfectionism

  • Heightened levels of anxiety

  • Higher levels of stress

  • More likely to burnout

  • Interrupted intimate connections

  • Shame

  • Depression

ARE YOU EXPERIENCING SYMPTOMS OF Perfectionism?

  • Perfectionism isn’t the same as reaching for excellence - from a place of joy, competition, or the curiosity to see how far you can go, how much you can achieve. Perfectionism is linked with deep feelings of lack, low self-esteem, with an abiding feeling of not being good enough.

  • For the perfectionist, being “good enough” - that therapeutically driven phrase, is not, in fact, good enough. Only perfect is good enough. Only perfect will do. And given that perfection is generally out of reach for humans, life for the perfectionist is often experienced as a series of disappointments or fleeting successes that merely ratchet up the level of perfection for the next time.

  • There is little that is joyful about perfectionism as a maladaptive behaviour to stave off the pain of being human (which to the perfectionist may be viewed as average or mediocre). Striving for excellence, however, can be a wonderful, fulfilling way to live. It feels qualitatively different from the experience of the perfectionist.

Areas of Expertise

  • Perfectionism is another adaptive mindset and subsequent behaviour which grows out of traumatic responses to past failure or judgement or can arise from a traumatic response to feeling out of control (in a similar pathway to eating disorders, self-harm, or other compulsive and addictive behaviours). Perfectionism at its core is an avoidant behaviour. The urge to be perfect, the need to be perfect, stems from overwhelming internal pressures, which, like all trauma-based defences, are designed to keep us protected and safe from something which feels ultimately annihilating.

  • Most perfectionists will also experience heightened levels of anxiety. Indeed for some, perfectionism is a way to deal with anxiety, which then loops back into itself. So for example I am anxious that I won’t perform well enough on this example/presentation/dinner, so I implement an extreme plan, practice excessively etc, and with every aspect of planning I implement, I also increase the anxiety that I may fail. A never-ending loop. Not all perfectionists will be highly anxious in a way that is debilitating but they will feel a high level of self-imposed internal pressure. Any time an individual can not separate a thing from the Self, there will be emotional discomfort and discord.
    Obsessive Compulsive Disorder is not necessarily linked to Perfectionism although some Perfectionists do develop OCD. One can absolutely exist without the other.

  • Doctors and Therapists, as well as parents and teachers, have seen the rise in young people exhibiting the perfectionist mindset. Often the perfectionism is first noticed by the adults around a young person in terms of anxiety. We have created a mainstream culture that has more information, education and pressure than any previous generation, and although social media is in the mix - it is certainly not the singular devil it is sometimes made out to be.

    From the 1980s onward, most Western countries have had a mainly steady and at times exponential growth, in education and information. While a more educated populous is viewed by most as important for any country’s growth, what has come alongside the rise in education has also been the exponential growth of information - which isn’t the same thing. Global media, social media, and reality television have exposed more and more people to lives that aren’t like their own. While this can create choice and interest and lead to greater creativity, it can also lead to ungrounded and out of context expectations, as well as a skewed view of norms and mores. In a sense, we are now judging ourselves not by our own standards, or that of our family or community, but by the lives of people who may be very different from us. People with different incomes, levels of support, etc.

    So it’s important to recognise that perfectionism, and its cousins FOMO and CBA as well as being linked to childhood traumatic responses, may also be born of a culture that often links self-worth with “stuff” and seamless manufactured beauty, both that, like perfectionism itself has us feeling more and more disconnected from health.

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