C
omparing ourselves to others is another human trait intrinsic to our nature and necessary to our experience on this earth. Indeed, it is useful and supportive when it motivates us to improve and inspires us to be better human beings.
Unfortunately most often, comparing ourselves with others creates a bunch of negative emotions like envy, frustration and feeling stuck. When these negative emotions arise we tend to lose sight of our story and we lose ourselves in the choices that other people made in completely different contexts. We waste precious time on negative and toxic emotions that just bring us down, instead of investing it in our projects and plans.
Most of the studies done on this subject show that around 75% of participants have experienced envy in the prior year. It seems to be a very common problem to have.
So, here are my tips for you:
We have to remind ourselves that we all have a very unique DNA, we value different things and we are on different paths. we just cannot compare a cherry with a strawberry (sorry, I’ve been eating lots of those recently, hence the reference to them).
Notice when the self-pitying voice of our victim saboteur is triggered and is making us feel uniquely flawed and disadvantaged. The emotions that usually accompany this limiting belief are hopelessness and loneliness. If possible avoid or prepare yourself for those situations, people or places that trigger your comparison thoughts and also label those beliefs as lies and set them aside. Instead, focus intentionally on more supportive and encouraging thoughts.
Take some precious time to revisit your coordinates (values) and to fire up your why. Also practice gratitude. The strength and energy we get with these simple exercises really have a big positive impact on the way we shift and choose our thoughts.
Compare yourself inwards: The only real competition we should have is who we were yesterday. We can see real growth through reflection and we can give ourselves a very well-deserved pack on the back for our growth and development. We need to be proud of our story, the challenges we have overcome, the easy bits, and the most difficult ones. It’s our unique path and we need to stand proudly on it.
Use the people you look up to as a guide. Ask for questions, advice, and wisdom. Make them your mentor. By choosing them and “using” them, you are more empowered to stay focused on you and make them the “signal” of where you need to concentrate. Be vulnerable enough to show your curiosity and interest instead of being crushed by negative comparisons.
And finally, of course, social media can play a very negative role in this matter. When we scroll down the pages of our favourite app, we tend to forget that we are simply comparing others’ curated exterior life with our most vulnerable inner world. This seems simply very unfair to me! So be selective with the people you follow and be mindful of the time you spend on social media.
If you can take away something from this note, this would be it: the only person you should be comparing yourself to is yourself! Focus on growing from within, being kinder, more resilient, authentic, and aware of your own path.
Every minute spent comparing your life to someone else’s is a minute lost on creating your own.
So, let’s say yes to being inspired, motived, and guided by others, and let’s say a big resounding NO to be dragged down in a place of hopelessness and waste by useless comparison. We don’t deserve it and we can do better: water our beautiful and unique grass!
I’m going to leave you with this quote:
"Today you are you, that is truer than true. There is no one alive who is you-er than you." - Dr. Seuss.
I’m always here for you.
PS: As always feel free to forward this letter to friends, colleagues, and family who might benefit from it, thanks!