Does anyone on here consider themselves to be a perfectionist?
I think it is more of a negative attribute that can cause a lot of problems, and the trait will probably damage an individual.
I've recognised a bit of it within myself and it has made me understand things a bit more.
Footballers will likely carry a lot of this trait.
I think it can also cause problems with finances and it may have a link to gambling problems.
Any thoughts?
1
Comments
The key to happiness is to try and be happy in the present and accept what you cant change, and just like in football despite your best efforts you may not achieve the outcome you are looking for.
Try and avoid seeking perfection, excellence is good enough !
For example, Mrs Idle has a tendency to agonise over holiday choices looking for the perfect thing. In the meantime, lots of very good options get booked up and we end up taking somethinganything before there's nothing left.
When your perfect in every way..
I can't wait to look in the mirror..
'Cos I get better looking each day..
To know me is to love me..
I must be a hell of a man..
Oh lord it's hard to be humble..
But i'm doing the best that I can....
Much better to trot out the mantra that allows you to hide behind mediocrity.
Point out the weaknesses and you have justified lack of effort, inertia, abdication of responsibility and sloth.
Perfect.
NOTHING is important or real. It’s all an illusion. We are talking monkeys hanging on to a rock hurtling through nothing. Blow a raspberry and hang on.
if at first you don’t succeed then perhaps failure is your style.
Life got a lot easier when I acknowledged that most often I had neither the talent or aptitude to achieve most of them.
I wouldn't say that I just accept what life throws at me....but I have learnt to recognise that I am doing OK in life and am generally pretty happy with my lot.
This kind of acceptance is quite liberating.
Climbing the mountain half way means at least you gave it a go.
Where others make do with using an alternative, I find that really difficult and want the right things in place before starting.
Yeh that makes sense to me.
I believe we all need days of simply just doing "nothing".
A typical Sunday of only relaxing, resting and watching TV. It regenerates the mind and helps put things into perspective
Agreed
Agree.
I would add to that: while climbing, look around you - there's plenty of beauty at even the foot of a mountain.
I go to my piano (now here's a mountain...) every evening for anything from 10 minutes to 3hours.
I will be doing this untill I run out of Baba Ganoush.
I'm an eternal beginner.
But even the great Glenn Gould told us "no composer has ever improved on his opus 1" (not one for controversy was our Glenn...)
In the words of one of my clients:
"Nobody is perfect and I am nobody"