How to let go of perfection
Discover how to let go of perfection and realise when your best is good enough.
A major source of stress for many women is the quest to achieve perfection – though you might not realise youโre succumbing to it. โDespite juggling many plates, you might tell yourself that you have to do everything perfectly and thus can end up feeling that you never do anything well enough,โ explains Hilary Sims. The antidote is learning to accept that your best is good enough.
How? Dismantling the โbe perfectโ drivers that many of us have internalised is key. โThis is one of the drivers that we learn from our parents at a very young age,โ Sims explains. โDoing your best should be good enough but sometimes the messages youโve absorbed can lead you to think that if you donโt perform perfectly, youโre not doing well enough.โ
She recommends these steps for dealing with a โbe perfectโ driver:
- Practice giving self-gratification instead of always relying on others to tell you that youโve done a good job.
- Learn to champion what you have achieved rather than focusing on what you havenโt ticked off your to-do list.
- Recognise when youโve done your best and donโt need to do any more. Itโs about learning to be proud of yourself for the person you are, not the person you are trying to become.
Think back to a time when you took home a school test result. Maybe you got a great grade but your parent might have pointed out that youโd have got a better mark if youโd revised more. โThe parent is focussing on what you haven’t achieved, rather than what you have,โ says Sims. โThis can lead us to believe that what weโve done is not good enough and in our next test, we might put more pressure on ourselves to achieve more. When, in fact, we can only ever do our best.โ
Those โbe perfectโ drivers can show up in adulthood too. If youโre juggling domestic commitments with work, you might feel that youโre not doing any of your โjobsโ properly. That can lead to feeling guilty if you take time for yourself, even though looking after yourself boosts your capacity to handle stress, says Sims.ย
Your best is good enough
Stress can escalate quickly for women in the sandwich generation years, caring for kids and ageing parents simultaneously. How can we navigate these busy years without succumbing to the extra stresses they can bring?
โNo one is expecting you to be Wonder Woman,โ adds Sims. And yet we often expect that of ourselves. She recommends learning to recognise when things have got too much.ย If your plate feels full, acknowledge it.
โMake a list of things you need to do and see what support you can get to do them differently.ย Tell the family which bits are causing you more stress and ask for help. If you don’t manage to clean everything or complete all your tasks in one week, spread them out over a number of weeks. And remember if people come to visit your home, they come to see you, not which jobs you have or haven’t done.โ
Accepting that your best is good enough is vital. For me, this meant lowering my expectations of myself. In this season of grief and readjustment, I canโt achieve as much as I once could. So Iโve chosen to let go of some things in order to cultivate a less stressful life.
Iโve outsourced the things I can. Iโve swapped the gym for a slow daily lunchtime stroll and I listen to an audio book while walking since Iโm too knackered for a book a bedtime but miss the stress-relief of reading.
Above all, I rest before I feel worn out. I sometimes de-prioritise folding laundry and put my feet up instead. It takes practice to continually spend time on things that reduce stress or which increase your capacity to handle it – especially if youโve grown up feeling pressure to prove that you can have it all.
But dropping balls, Iโve learned, is the secret to a less stressful life. It turns out they donโt all smash – the thing is to work out which balls are the ones that bounce.