Overcoming Perfectionism for Personal Growth

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Summary

Overcoming perfectionism for personal growth means letting go of the need for flawless results, which often blocks progress and creativity. Perfectionism is more than high standards—it's a habit rooted in fear and the desire to feel safe, but it ultimately stops you from moving forward and learning from experience.

  • Choose progress: Focus on moving forward with imperfect actions instead of waiting for everything to be just right.
  • Release control: Allow yourself—and others—to make mistakes, learn, and grow by letting go of the urge to micromanage every detail.
  • Embrace feedback: Share your work early and welcome input, using it as a springboard for improvement rather than endless refinement.
Summarized by AI based on LinkedIn member posts
  • View profile for Shubhangi Madan Vatsa

    Co-founder @The People Company | Linkedin Top Voice 2024 | Personal Brand Strategist | Linkedin Ghostwriter & Organic Growth Marketer | Content Management | 200M+ Client Views | Publishing Daily for next 350 Days

    123,914 followers

    2019: I quit creating content on YouTube because it wasn't "perfect." Looking back, I cringe at the opportunities I've lost chasing perfection. That perfectionist mindset? It cost me time, money, and growth. I'd spend hours tweaking a video, never hitting publish. Why? It wasn't "good enough." But here's the truth: done is better than perfect. While I was polishing pixels, others were building audiences, making connections, and growing their brands. My pursuit of perfection left me stuck at the starting line. Three big lessons I've learned: 1. Embrace the messy middle  Your first tries won't be your best. That's okay. It's part of the process. 2. Feedback beats perfection You learn more from publishing and getting real feedback than from endless tweaking. 3. Progress over perfection Small, consistent steps forward beat waiting for the "perfect" moment to start. Now, I focus on progress, not perfection. I hit publish, even when it's not 100% perfect. And guess what? The world didn't end. In fact, it opened up. Remember: If you're tired of starting over, stop giving up. Your "imperfect" action today beats your "perfect" plan tomorrow. #growthmindset

  • View profile for Amy Gallo
    Amy Gallo Amy Gallo is an Influencer
    59,951 followers

    I need to get better at being worse at my job. Here’s why: I hate making mistakes. I have unreasonably high standards. And (I cringe to type this) I just want to be the best at everything I do. If reading that made you tired, you’re right: perfectionism is exhausting. Maintaining constant high standards takes time and emotional commitment and causes stress. Just as bad is that perfectionism interferes with my relationships. I tend to hold those around me to the same high standards (MY standards, not THEIRS). So when they (reasonably) fail to meet the standards, I can get resentful and impatient. My creativity suffers too. When I’m focused on being the best, I get way too “heads down” and miss what’s happening around me. I know this perfectionist habit will not be easy to break, but I’m determined to start the process by asking myself these five questions: 1. How can I make this task less stressful? ➡️ Rather than “how can I do this perfectly?” I’m asking, “what could I do to make this easier?” For example, I’ve started giving myself time limits for how long I’ll work on a project, or outsourcing parts of it to others. 2. Is that mistake the end of the world? ➡️ I guarantee it’s not. So stop pretending it is (Amy!). 3. Are you being nice to yourself? ➡️ When it’s time to review work I remind myself that I’m not perfect and that’s OK. 4. Can I lower my standard and still be satisfied with the outcome? ➡️ Chances are yes. What would the end result look like if I dialed it back 10 or 20%? 5. Am I ruminating or problem solving? ➡️ Sometimes when I overthink something I convince myself that it’s helpful. Now I ask myself if I’m solving a problem or just spinning. 🌟 On avoiding “compound perfectionism”: The sneaky thing about perfectionism is that it makes me want to be perfect at not being perfect. (A gift that keeps on giving!) So while these questions are meant to help me change my habits, I do NOT want them to become another unreasonably high standard. So if (just kidding, when) I forget to ask myself these questions, I have to let it go. I have to say: “It’s okay, Amy. You’re doing really well. You’re learning new habits, and it takes time to change. I’m proud of you for trying something new and challenging.” Here’s to being worse at my job(s), from writing to parenting and everything in between. Are you with me? (And for more on this, see the link in the comments.)

  • View profile for Dorota Kosiorek

    AI Startup Leader & Mental Coach | Curating high-performance lifestyles for leaders who want to win the long game | Bringing The Strategic Off-Season to Business | Neuroscience • Sport Psychology • Environment Design

    4,900 followers

    80% of the high performers I coach describe themselves as perfectionists. But here’s what we uncover very quickly: It’s not about high standards. It’s about how their brain has been trained to keep them safe. Because perfectionism isn’t a personality trait. It’s a mental loop. One rooted in past experiences, reinforced by success culture, and hardwired into your nervous system. → “If I get it just right, I’ll avoid judgment.” → “If I don’t fail, I’ll stay in control.” → “If I keep pushing, I’ll stay ahead.” The brain loves certainty. And for many high performers, perfectionism feels like certainty. But the truth? It’s a false sense of control that keeps you stuck in overthinking, hesitation, and delay. And it’s costing you growth. Neuroscience tells us that the brain processes emotional threat the same way it processes physical pain. Which is why anything that risks “not being good enough” feels so deeply uncomfortable. But here’s where everything changes: Once you retrain your brain to stop chasing certainty—and start choosing momentum over mastery—you rewire your identity. In my coaching practice, this is the shift I help high performers make: → From intellectualizing their fear… to building emotional capacity to move through it. → From over-preparing… to trusting their own thinking in real-time. → From perfection as protection… to progress as power. And this is where the real breakthroughs happen. Some of the boldest changes I’ve witnessed in my clients came after they dropped the perfection narrative: 1 ➡️ Leaving a role that looked “perfect” on paper—but felt lifeless ↳ The clarity came only after they stopped trying to optimize their next move 2 ➡️ Setting boundaries that felt terrifying at first ↳ But built their confidence faster than any external win ever had 3 ➡️ Launching a new direction with no guarantee of success ↳ And realizing that action—not certainty—is what shapes identity So let me ask you: → What’s one decision you’ve been postponing until it’s “perfect”? → And what would shift if you trusted yourself enough to move anyway? Because success at the next level isn’t about polishing your edges. It’s about upgrading your mind. And that starts with one bold, imperfect action. If this resonates, drop me a DM and let’s talk about how to retrain your brain to think, lead, and live at the level you actually want. PS. try out my 3 Brain Shifts to Break Free from Perfectionists.

  • View profile for John Brewton

    We are all becoming companies. I help you build yours. | Double Founder at Operating by John Brewton (Substack Bestseller) & 6AEP (An Operating Advisory for the Future of Companies)

    36,143 followers

    Chasing perfection is a choice. To never get the job done. Perfectionism is the most sophisticated form of self-sabotage. Especially for the ambitious. It wears a professional mask: "I just want it to be excellent." "I care about the details." "I'm not ready to release it yet." But here's the uncomfortable truth rarely acknowledged: Perfectionism isn't a badge of high standards, it's a deeply embedded fear response. And its hidden costs are far greater than most realize. ➤ It paralyzes your momentum. ➤ It erodes your creative courage. ➤ It creates distance between you and your collaborators. ➤ It depletes your finite resources: time, energy, and drive. And perhaps most insidiously? It often lurks behind achievement. High performers mistakenly attribute their success to perfectionist tendencies. When in reality, these patterns are precisely what's preventing their next breakthrough. The crucial distinction I've observed across 15 years building companies: Perfection centers on control. Excellence thrives on growth. Control keeps you endlessly refining. Growth propels you forward. Control shields you from critique. Growth actively seeks feedback as fuel. Control demands flawless planning. Growth generates consistent, imperfect progress. If you're creating something meaningful, whether it's an organization, a professional trajectory, or a lasting impact, you cannot allow the flawless to eliminate the feasible. Here's what I recommend instead: ↳ Replace Perfectionism with Excellencism: Maintain high standards while releasing ego attachment ↳ Embrace Iteration: Test → Learn → Improve as a continual cycle ↳ Use the 80/20 Rule: Concentrate on the critical few activities that genuinely drive results ↳ Adopt a Growth Mindset: Reframe missteps not as failures but as necessary building blocks If you lead a team, cultivate an environment where: ↳ Done > Perfect ↳ Curiosity > Judgment ↳ Progress > Polish Perfectionism will quietly steal your productivity, your peace of mind, and ultimately your forward motion. Launch it. Share it. Extract lessons. Evolve. The future belongs to those with the courage to be visibly imperfect. What's one way perfectionism has slowed you down? Let's talk about it in the comments. 👇 ♻️ Repost if you found this helpful. Do. Fail. Learn. Grow. Win. Repeat. Forever. — ➕ Follow me, John Brewton, for content that Helps. ➕Follow 6A East Partners for content that answers: What is the future of companies? 🔗 Subscribe to Operating by John Brewton for deep dives on the history and future of operating and optimizing companies.

  • View profile for Evan Carroll

    DTC Growth Expert // $700M+ In Trackable DTC Sales // Scaling 7-9 Figure DTC Brands

    36,353 followers

    Perfectionism nearly stopped me from starting my agency. ↳ I'm glad I ignored it Most entrepreneurs get stuck in endless preparation mode. Always "almost ready" but never quite there. The website needs another tweak. The logo could be better. The processes aren't polished enough. Here's what I learned: done is better than perfect. And launching messy teaches you more than months of planning ever could. If you're stuck in perfectionism mode, here's how to snap out of it: 1. Just make it work Your first version doesn't need to be your forever version. It just needs to function well enough to get started. 2. Set real deadlines     Tell people when you're launching before you're actually ready. Nothing gets you moving like external pressure. 3. Let customers tell you what matters     You can't figure out what's important sitting by yourself planning. Real feedback from real people is the only thing that counts. 4. Focus on one core thing     Instead of perfecting everything, nail one key element. Everything else can be improved later. — Look, perfectionism isn't really about having high standards. It's just fear dressed up to look productive. Fear of being judged. Fear of failing. Fear of not being good enough. But launching before you're ready will teach you more in a month than a year of planning. The market rewards action. And one of my favorite quotes is one that I repeat to myself daily to always remember this lesson: "Progress over perfection"

  • View profile for Youssef El Allame

    Acquisition Entrepreneur | Escaped Investment Banker | Documenting the messy lessons on business, career, personal growth & building real freedom through systems and execution

    25,866 followers

    I was wrong. I used to think being a perfectionist was a good thing. Turns out, it's a hidden life killer. It creates a productivity paradox. You get bogged down by details, miss deadlines, and struggle with priorities. It damages relationships. You have unrealistic standards for yourself and others. It fuels imposter syndrome. You never feel "good enough" despite your achievements. You are constantly comparing yourself to others' best moments. It leads to burnout. The constant stress of never being satisfied deteriorates your work-life balance. The reality is, perfectionism costs more than it delivers. Here's how I overcame it: 1. Accepted that "done" is better than "perfect" 2. Set realistic deadlines and stick to them 3. Focused on progress, not perfection 4. Celebrated small wins—every step counts 5. Saw mistakes as learning opportunities I believe some of the most successful people aren't perfectionists, they're pragmatists. The irony? My work improved when I stopped trying to make it perfect. If you're struggling with perfectionism, remember: Excellence is achievable. Perfection isn't. What's one step you're taking to overcome perfectionism?

  • You Don’t Need to Be Perfect to Be Successful Is your desire to be perfect actually holding you back? Perfectionism often feels like a strength. It pushes you to achieve more, work harder, and never settle. But over time, that constant drive for flawlessness can lead to burnout, depression, and even physical pain. In my practice, I see how perfectionism can silently fuel emotional struggles. It’s not just about wanting to succeed – at its core, perfectionism often stems from feeling like you’re not enough. So, you overcompensate. You try to control every detail, believing that if you’re perfect, you’ll finally feel whole. But here’s the truth: Perfection isn’t the answer – it’s the problem. 🔗 The Link Between Perfectionism and Pain🔗 ▪️ Psychologists believe perfectionism is deeply tied to anxiety, depression, and even psychophysiologic pain (physical symptoms triggered by emotional stress). ▪️ Your mind, in its attempt to protect you, channels emotional pain into your body. Headaches, muscle tension, or back pain may not have a physical cause, but an emotional one – driven by the weight of trying to be perfect. 🔸 Three Ways to Let Go of Perfectionism 🔸 ✅ Challenge Unrealistic Standards Ask yourself: Is this goal realistic, or am I setting the bar too high? Recognize that striving for excellence is different from demanding perfection. Allow room for mistakes – they are part of growth, not signs of failure. ✅ Focus on Progress, Not Perfection Shift your mindset. Celebrate the effort you put in, not just the end result. Remind yourself that progress is valuable, even if it’s not perfect. Small steps forward are still steps forward. ✅ Practice Self-Compassion Treat yourself with the same kindness you’d offer a friend. When you feel the urge to criticize yourself, pause. Reflect on what you’ve achieved, and remember that being “good enough” is more than enough. “Perfectionism is not the same thing as striving for excellence. Perfectionism is the belief that if we do things perfectly, we can avoid the pain of blame, judgment, and shame.”  – Brené Brown Letting go of perfection doesn’t mean letting go of ambition. It means releasing the fear of not being enough. The more you embrace your imperfections, the lighter life feels – and the happier, healthier you become. ✨ Please feel free to share this post to help spread awareness and support around mental health. You never know who might need this reminder today.✨ 🔔Follow me for more insights and updates on mental health and wellness!🔔 #mentalhealth #motivation #wellness #perfectionism #growth #psychiatry (Image Credit: Liz Fosslien) (For educational purposes only. Not medical advice.)

  • View profile for Pablo Restrepo

    Helping Individuals, Organizations and Governments in Negotiation | 30 + years of Global Experience | Speaker, Consultant, and Professor | Proud Father | Founder of Negotiation by Design |

    12,772 followers

    Why does “good” feel like a personal failure?  What if chasing perfection is why you're stuck? Perfectionism isn’t a badge of honor. It’s a quiet thief—stealing time, joy, and even success. If you’ve ever deleted a draft, rethought a decision endlessly, or hesitated to act because it wasn’t just right, this post is for you. As someone who’s coached negotiators, innovators, and even myself through analysis paralysis, I’ve seen perfectionism derail brilliant minds. I’ve been there too, rewriting the same LinkedIn post six times only to realize that the first draft was fine. (Oh, the irony!) Here’s the perfectionism trap and how to escape it:  🚫 It’s Paralyzing:    A few years ago, I found myself stuck—revising a PowerPoint that was already fine.     My obsession with perfection meant I missed dinner, lost sleep, and almost missed the bigger picture: delivering impactful insights.     Lesson? Nobody sees your imaginary flaws—they’re focused on the value you deliver. 🚫 It’s Costly:    Every hour spent perfecting that deck was time I could’ve spent refining my message or rehearsing my delivery.     Imagine what you could achieve if you redirected perfectionism’s grip on details toward meaningful progress. 🚫 It’s Never Satisfied:    Let’s be honest: the “perfect” slide doesn’t exist. After 20+ iterations, I realized I was chasing a mirage.     At some point, you have to say, “It’s good enough.” And trust me—it is.  🚫 It Blocks Growth:    You don’t improve by obsessing over every detail—you improve by doing.    The learning loop is where real growth happens: try, fail, reflect, and iterate.     When I shifted from perfectionism to iteration, my work got better—not because it was flawless, but because I learned faster. Failures are feedback, not flaws. Progress over perfection isn’t just a motivational quote—it’s the strategy that gets results.    → Submit the messy first draft.  → Say “yes” before you’re ready.  → The pursuit of perfection is overrated.  → Action wins every time. When was the last time perfectionism held you back? Let me know in the comments—your story might inspire someone to finally take the leap. 

  • View profile for Travis Bradberry

    Author, THE NEW EMOTIONAL INTELLIGENCE • Follow me to increase your EQ & exceed your goals ⚡ Bestselling author • 5M+ books sold

    2,609,595 followers

    "We are not perfect, nor should we pretend to be, but it is necessary to be the best version of ourselves we can be." Here are three short ways to apply this in your own life: 1) Embrace Mistakes as Learning Opportunities: Instead of hiding or feeling ashamed of your imperfections, view them as chances to grow. For example, if you miss a work deadline, don’t pretend it didn’t happen—acknowledge it, apologize if needed, and identify how to manage your time better next time. This helps you improve without the pressure of perfection. 2) Set Realistic Goals for Self-Improvement: Focus on progress by setting small, achievable goals that align with your values. If you want to be more patient, practice deep breathing during stressful moments or commit to listening fully before responding in conversations. Celebrate incremental growth rather than aiming for flawless behavior. 3) Be Authentic in Relationships: Stop pretending to have it all together and share your true self with others. If you’re struggling with a challenge, like feeling overwhelmed, admit it to a friend or loved one. This vulnerability fosters deeper connections and allows you to focus on becoming a better version of yourself through honest support and feedback. Moving Forward... This quote encapsulates a philosophy of self-acceptance and personal growth. It acknowledges the inherent imperfection of humanity—our flaws, mistakes, and limitations—while rejecting the pressure to hide them. Pretending to be perfect often stems from societal expectations or fear of judgment, but this facade can lead to inauthenticity, stress, and disconnection. Instead, the quote encourages embracing our imperfections as a natural part of being human, fostering vulnerability and genuine self-expression.

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