5 Practical Ways to Stop Comparing Yourself to Others
Written By: M.K. | February 6, 2018
I’ve
struggled with it most of my life. Typically, I blame it on being the middle
child and coming from a broken home. But if I was being truly honest, more
likely, it is simply a character flaw hidden somewhere deep in my heart.
I’ve lived most of my life comparing myself to others. At
first, it was school and beauty. But as I got older, I began comparing other
metrics: job title, income level, house size, and worldly successes.
I have discovered there is an infinite number of
categories upon which we can compare ourselves and an almost infinite number of
people to compare ourselves to. Once we begin down that road, we never find an
end.
The tendency to compare ourselves to others is as human
as any other emotion. Certainly I’m not alone in my experience. But it is
a decision that only steals joy from our lives. And it is a habit with numerous
shortcomings:
·
Comparisons are always unfair. We typically compare the worst we
know of ourselves to the best we presume about others.
·
Comparisons rob us of precious time. We each get 86,400 seconds each day. And using even one to compare yourself or your
accomplishments to another is one second too many.
·
You have nothing to gain, but much to lose. For example: your
pride, your dignity, your drive, and your passion.
·
You are too unique to compare fairly. Your gifts and
talents and successes and contributions and value are entirely unique to you
and your purpose in this world. They can never be properly compared to anyone
else.
·
Comparison puts focus on the wrong person. You can control one
life—yours. But when we constantly compare ourselves to others, we waste
precious energy focusing on other peoples’ lives rather than our own.
Take note of the foolish (and harmful) nature of comparison.
Take
a good look at the list above. Take notice of comparison’s harmful effects in
your life. And find priority to intentionally remove it from the inside-out.
Indeed,
the negative effects of comparisons are wide and far-reaching. Likely, you have
experienced (or are experiencing) many of them first-hand in your life as well.
How
then, might we break free from this habit of comparison? Consider,
embrace, and proceed forward with the following steps.
1.
Become
intimately aware of your own successes.
Whether
you are a writer, musician, doctor, landscaper, mother, or student, you have a
unique perspective backed by unique experiences and unique gifts. You have the
capacity to love, serve, and contribute. You have everything you need to
accomplish good in your little section of the world. With that opportunity
squarely in front of you, become intimately aware of your past successes. And
find motivation in them to pursue more.
2.
Pursue
the greater things in life.
Some
of the greatest treasures in this world are hidden from sight: love, humility,
empathy, selflessness, generosity. Among these higher pursuits, there is no measurement.
Desire them above everything else and remove yourself entirely from society’s
definition of success.
3.
Compete
less. Appreciate more.
There may be times when competition is
appropriate, but life is not one of them. We have all been thrown together at
this exact moment on this exact planet. And the sooner we stop competing
against others to “win,” the faster we can start working together to figure it
out. The first and most important step in overcoming the habit of competition
is to routinely appreciate and compliment the contribution of others.
4.
Gratitude,
gratitude, gratitude.
Gratitude
always forces us to recognize the good things we already have in our world.
5.
Remind
yourself nobody is perfect.
While
focusing on the negatives is rarely as helpful as focusing on the positives,
there is important space to be found remembering that nobody is perfect and
nobody is living a painless life. Triumph requires an obstacle to be overcome.
And everybody is suffering through their own, whether you are close enough to
know it or not.
With so many negative
effects inherent in comparison, it is a shame we ever take part in it. But the
struggle is real for most of us. Fortunately, it does not need to be. And the freedom
found in comparing less is entirely worth the effort.
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