Friday I left my last class holding
my head high because I can now say that I’ve finished an entire year of college
while keeping my sanity! This is something I have never done before. Honestly,
it is something that I doubted I could ever do. So what changed? How was I able
to successfully finish my junior year of college (round 2)?
Well, so much has changed, but I
can narrow it down to one thing: compassion.
See, back a few years ago, I set the highest expectation for
myself: perfection. But the problem with perfection is that it doesn’t exist.
There is always another hoop to jump through, another rung on the ladder to
climb. But, I was determined. I would do everything possible to reach that perfect
ideal I had in my head. I gotta say, I got pretty close—at least from the
outside looking in. However, the drive for perfection tore me to pieces. I
always felt like a failure. If I wasn’t perfect in every little thing I would
beat myself up, physically through my eating disorder and mentally through all
the lies I told myself about how I was such a failure. The joy in any success
was tainted by the intense pressure of the next task. In the end, those high
expectations knocked me off my feet.
But I’ve grown, and I’ve changed my
motto. “Stakes are low”. Whether it’s in preparation for a final or getting
ready for a Theta formal that anticipatory anxiety creeps in. I fight the
battle with perfection. What if I screw up? What if I don’t make an A? What if
I embarrass myself? In these moments, I remind myself, “stakes are low”. I give
myself compassion, the space to mess up and still be ok. Because even if I fail
my final or make a total ass of myself, I’m still me. Those events, those high
expectations I put on myself to try to make sure I end up a success, don’t have
to define me. In the end, my achievements and the way people view me don’t
really matter. My true friends and family don’t love me because I make straight
A’s or because I’m the perfect sorority girl. They love me because I am a loyal
friend, because I care deeply, because I am funny. And ultimately, they love me
just because I am me. Whether I end up a doctor, a therapist, or jobless.
Whether I am popular or an outsider. Whether I have a 6 pack or squish rolls.
Their love for me doesn’t change. And most importantly, God’s love for me
doesn’t change.
I am no longer crushed by the
pressure of perfection. I am free to live, to make mistakes, to learn from
them. I am free to just be—to relax and put my worries aside. Because stakes
are low NOT high. Part of me wishes I could go back and tell my old self that,
but a larger part of me knows I needed to go through those times to get to
where I am now: living a life of self-compassion. So instead, I will share with
all you who also struggle with the desire to be perfect: STAKES ARE LOW.
