Comparing yourself to others often breeds jealousy and/or a sense of disappointment. There will ALWAYS be someone with a better, bigger, newer, shinier, smarter, richer, faster or flashier whatever. At best you may win the comparison contest for a few weeks before you are topped or your achievement, if compared to others, loses its merit, interest or bragging rights.
However, comparisons can also be very constructive as they motivate us to seek to improve ourselves and our situation. We look around and speculate how we can make for a better tomorrow. Much of this forward thinking is based on comparing what is to what might be; looking for a fix or improvement to our current situation. If there was no better or worse outcome, nothing would be worth doing. (1)
So, how can you make the process of comparison helpful and work for you? It comes down to what is the standard or base you use when you make comparisons. Is it reasonably achievable or unrealistic? Related or unrelated to your personal strengths?
The Canadian psychologist Jordan Peterson came up with a simple and effective rule, being: “Compare yourself to who you were yesterday, not to who someone else is today”. (1) Looking at the comparison process this way provides some practical guide. Letting go of others in the comparison game makes the possibility of successful improvement highly achievable, as you become your own standard.
So how can you make comparison helpful and hopeful? Decide on what aspects of yourself to focus on for improvement by asking: “What is the better version of yourself you want?” What are those personal attributes that you are likely to succeed at bettering? Set low and readily achievable targets and slowly up your game. Observe and appreciate your personal improvement over time. Make the rewards for progress intrinsic and personally satisfying. Look at your yesterday and note how your today is in a minor way better.
Letting go of others in the comparison process is an effective way to focus on yourself and your journey. Get rid of the disquieting self-doubt and jealousy that others unhelpfully introduce into your self-improvement challenge.
Reflection Source: www.Smallercup.org
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(1): Jordan B. Peterson, 12 Rules for Life: An Antidote to Chaos, (Penguin Books, 2018)