Tuesday, November 19, 2019
3 Bad Ways Youre Comparing Yourself to Others -The Muse
3 Bad Ways Youre Comparing Yourself to Others -The Muse 3 Bad Ways Youre Comparing Yourself to Others Youâre surrounded by the competition. You may be working like a machine to build your career, but in this competitive world, thereâs a grinding of metal on metal- a tension that makes you compare yourself to others. Colleagues with higher salaries. Peers with faster career advancement. Friends with better titles and greater freedom. Itâs everywhere. And itâs inevitable. However, those comparisons always take away from your sense of self and never actually get you ahead, so itâs vital that you learn how to stop comparing your professional path to othersâ. To help you do that, here are three common beliefs that people often impose on themselves- and how you can turn your mindset around. Belief #1: âOther People Have All the Luckâ Part of me wants to be Benedict Cumberbatch. Heâs smart and funny and looks pretty good in a suit. Heâs insanely talented and could fill 221b Baker Street to the roof with all his cash. Heâs engaged to someone gorgeous, and heâs been cast as Dr. Strange in the Marvel cinematic universe (trust this geek- thatâs huge). Lucky son of a gun. Why do I have to struggle in a small town in Kent, when I could be on the red carpet with Hollywood throwing money at me? The injustice of it all. The notion that others have all the luck, while you get none of the breaks, is nasty. More than a simple demonstration of envy, itâs envy without recognition of your own capability. It's envy without effort, with a sprinkling of ignorance. Luck isnât a passive experience where the world simply gives you something on a silver platter; it requires you to make effort and notice an opportunity to make something happen. If I choose not to recognize Mr. Cumberbatchâs talent, his years of craft, or his love for what he does, then Iâm really missing the point. Instead of looking at the guy who just landed the promotion or the girl who just scored some major praise and chalking it up to blind luck, look for opportunities for how you can do great work, too. Belief #2: âOther People Have Something I Don'tâ Other people are younger than me. Many are more talented. Some are better looking. A handful are funnier. But even though I know that, I sometimes catch myself thinking, Why are they so much better than me? I know youâve had similar thoughts. You look at that guy in your department and wonder how everything comes so easily to him. You watch a woman lead a meeting or a workshop and convince yourself that you couldnât do it as well as she did. You see the new employee and wonder if you were ever that talented and passionate. Everyone makes these comparisons, because we all fear that weâre not good enough. We all fear that weâll be called out for our shortcomings. We all fear that weâll screw up. But these arenât healthy comparisons. Itâs one thing to compare avocados for ripeness or bed linens for luxuriousness, but comparing your insides with someone elseâs outsides is BS. Comparing your worst thoughts about yourself with the best possible perception of other people is crazy- like having a dream that youâre in a board meeting without your clothes on, and then getting a full-body tattoo of a business suit just in case it actually happens. So stop it. Face it: Some people are more talented than you, and some less so. Some have more experience, and some less so. Some have whiter shirts, and some less so. Those facts only detract from your capability if you think they do. Belief #3: âOther People Are More Successfulâ Success is a bizarre concept. It suggests that if you work and work and work, thereâs a tipping point where things suddenly move from being âunsuccessfulâ to âsuccessful.â It suggests that other people easily achieve this thing called success, while you have to work harder to attain it. And perhaps worst of all, it suggests that success is some kind of endgame, a place where you can sit back, stop trying so hard, and enjoy the good life. But the truth is, success is too often just a mirage; a constantly moving target that never really existed in the first place. To truly achieve success, you first have to unpack what it really means to you. For example, maybe you value being your own boss, creating something that matters, being part of something bigger than yourself, surrounding yourself with talented people, or any one of a million other things. Until you define your version of success, it will forever remain a comparative concept where others are always more successful than you. All of this leads us to one important question: What would it take for you to let go of the urge to compare yourself to others?
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