Recently, I realized I have held myself and others to a standard of perfection. And in turn, others hold me to the same standard. But the standard of perfection leaves all of us feeling we’re letting each other down. Letting ourselves down. And I found myself in a personal spiral: analyze, re-play, critique.
The major problem with this…perfection is not real.
Quality is real.
I started thinking about what on this planet requires absolute perfection. Absolute precision. Does anything? Surgery? Aerospace? I will argue not even these are held to a standard of perfection. Instead, it is a standard of quality.
The act of surgery is not perfect. The same surgeon can perform the same type of surgery 1000 times and the result will be nearly identical but not completely identical because each patient’s body is different. Each circumstance is different. However, quality is critical. Perfection does not leave room for differing circumstances. Perfection assumes the environment is idyllic and the circumstances are perfect. But that is never the reality. The scar on one patient will look worse than the scar on another patient. Is it the patient’s body? Is it the circumstances of the surgery where the surgery was performed as an emergency rather than in a controlled, planned environment? I am not in medicine, so I won’t speak to the why.
It’s quality that counts. Not perfection.
Years ago, I read a book called Grace, Not Perfection. This was geared toward mothers. Today, I am saying “quality not perfection” because I believe “quality” better applies to business. But goodness, as mothers, let’s give ourselves a little grace too.
If we are holding ourselves and allowing others to hold us to a standard of perfection, then we are setting ourselves and others up for stress, burnout, exhaustion, and broken emotions. Perfection is an unattainable standard. And if we expect this then we could be halting our own growth and creativity. Perfection does not allow for flexibility. Nor adaptability. It does not allow for life.
In life and in business we need flexibility and adaptability.
Quality IS attainable. Grace IS attainable.
Always the Numbers
It’s difficult to find statistics on ideas of perfection within motherhood but I found the ones below relevant:
The Next Step
I will never again use the word “perfectionist” as expectation for myself or others. How do we strive for quality over perfection?
For all the mom bosses out there, shifting focus from perfection to quality is a business decision and a lifestyle choice. It allows us to grow our business or career while also enjoying the fleeting moments of motherhood without the overwhelming pressure to be perfect. Let quality be the habit and guide. Start with one small habit to improve quality in your life rather than striving for perfection in all of life. One small habit added each day will bring great, positive change. You can read Atomic Habits for added inspiration on this one.
So, from a recovering “perfectionist”, I am no longer interested in perfection, and I will never refer to myself as a “perfectionist” again. I strive for quality. And grace.
Truly,
Helen