đThe Power Of The Perfectionist
Ever been called a âperfectionistâ like itâs an insult?
My kids do it to me all the time. They roll their eyes when I say my favorite phrase: âWhatâs worth doing, is worth doing well.â
What I mean as encouragement often gets heard as criticism. Suddenly, the âperfectionistâ label lands with that familiar sting â the face they make, the internal frustration I feel, and before long, the spiral begins: Maybe Iâm too much. Maybe Iâm the only one who cares. Maybe somethingâs wrong with me.
All because of a label.
But hereâs the thing: perfectionism has been culturally coded as âbadâ for so long that we forget it can actually reveal strengths, values, and even the way our brains are wired.
đĄ Not All Perfectionism Is the Same
Weâve all heard the saying: âIf you want something done right, do it yourself.â On the surface, it sounds like leadership. In reality, it can slide into frustration, resentment, and unhealthy striving fueled by rigidity and fear.
But not every drive for excellence is pathological perfectionism.
Perfectionism can also mean:
- You care deeply about doing things well.
- You donât settle for âgood enough.â
- You notice the details others miss.
- You inspire higher standards in the people around you.
Those traits are linked with conscientiousness, resilience, and achievement. That doesnât sound like a flaw to me.
đ§ The Brain Actually Likes Order
What we often dismiss as âperfectionismâ might just be your brain doing exactly what itâs designed to do â seek order, patterns, and meaning.
Hereâs what science tells us:
- Cognitive fluency: Our brains process organized, symmetrical, or neat information more easily. Itâs why you love a clean spreadsheet, a tidy room, or those oddly satisfying before-and-after photos.
- Executive function: The prefrontal cortex thrives on structure â lists, categories, and rules help us manage complexity. That urge for neatness isnât âobsessiveâ; itâs your brain reducing chaos.
- Dopamine release: Checking something off your to-do list gives you a rush. That little hit of satisfaction? Itâs your brain giving you a chemical high-five.
So when you feel good about striving for high standards or keeping things organized, thatâs not dysfunction â thatâs biology backing you up.
đ Why We Pathologize It
Yes, perfectionism can go wrong. In its extreme, it does cause burnout, people-pleasing, and anxiety. But our culture has swung so far toward labeling it a flaw that we forget:
- Liking neatness is not OCD.
- Holding yourself to high standards is not a disorder.
- Expecting good work from others is not controlling â it can be leadership.
The issue isnât perfectionism itself; itâs whether itâs driven by fear and anger or fueled by care, passion, and love.
âĄď¸ Where Perfectionism Goes Off Track
Healthy striving says: âI care about this, so I want to give my best.â
Harsh perfectionism says: âIf this isnât perfect, Iâm not good enough.â
The tricky part? Harsh self-criticism often disguises itself as âmotivation.â In reality, it drains your energy and shrinks your confidence.
When self-criticism takes over, it can show up as:
- Avoidance: not starting because nothing will ever be âgood enough.â
- Analysis paralysis: getting lost in the details instead of moving forward.
- Chronic dissatisfaction: never letting yourself feel proud of what youâve done.
- Fear of judgment: focusing more on avoiding mistakes than making an impact.
đ Curiosity as the Antidote
Curiosity breaks the spell of self-criticism. It shifts your brain out of threat mode and into exploration mode. Instead of fight-or-flight, you get to observe and wonder.
Hereâs how:
- Notice the Critic
Instead of fusing with it (âIâm a failureâ), pause and name it:
â âOh, thatâs my inner critic chiming in again.â - Get Curious, Not Cruel
Ask questions instead of judgments:
â âWhat part of me is trying to protect me right now?â
â âWhatâs really at risk if this isnât perfect?â
â âAm I holding my standard, or someone elseâs?â - Reframe the Standard
Curiosity tests whether your expectation is serving you:
â âWould 90% still move the needle here?â
â âWhat would âgood enough to tryâ look like?â - Celebrate the Striving
Instead of only rewarding outcomes, get curious about effort:
â âWhat did I learn about myself by pushing this far?â
â âWhere did my attention to detail add value?â
Real-life example: Youâre editing an email draft and think, âThis sounds stupid.â Curiosity interrupts: âWait â is it the tone, the clarity, or just my nerves?â Suddenly, youâre refining with focus, not spiraling in doubt.
⨠The Reframe
Perfectionism itself isnât the problem.
Itâs the lens we put on it. (Check out more on the lens here)
Perfectionism + Criticism = Burnout.
Perfectionism + Curiosity = Excellence.
đą The Takeaway
Perfectionism isnât always about fixing whatâs wrong.
Itâs about honoring whatâs right â your brainâs love of order, your value of excellence, and your desire to create things that last.
So embrace your high standards with compassion. Donât slap a negative label on qualities that help you shine. And most importantly, celebrate yourself in the process.
đ Now Iâm curious â where in your life has âperfectionismâ actually been one of your greatest strengths?
⨠Be sure to check back next week when we dive into another misguided label we give ourselvesâsubscribe so you donât miss a thing!





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