Atlas / Shrink Becoming / Confidence and Growth
SC-0007Evidence: under reviewShrink Becomingapplied

Perfectionism

Perfectionism is the pursuit of impossible certainty through impossible standards.

Shrink Definition

Perfectionism is the tendency to evaluate oneself or one's work against exceptionally high or inflexible standards while placing disproportionate importance on mistakes, imperfections, or the possibility of failure. Healthy striving seeks excellence. Perfectionism seeks certainty through flawlessness.

Plain language

Wanting to do something well is healthy. Believing it must be nearly perfect before it has value is often costly.

Shrink Insight

Perfectionism often delays success far more than it improves quality.

Why it matters

Perfectionism can influence: • productivity • creativity • confidence • relationships • leadership • burnout • procrastination • decision-making • emotional well-being Ironically, perfectionism frequently reduces performance because people hesitate to begin, delay completion, repeatedly revise, or avoid sharing their work.

Common misunderstanding

Perfectionism isn't simply having high standards. High standards encourage growth. Perfectionism often prevents growth by making mistakes feel unacceptable.

Shrink Perspective

Perfection often promises safety. Progress usually creates it.

Shrink Reflection

Where in your life has waiting for "perfect" prevented something meaningful from existing?

Shrink Journal

Think about a project you postponed because it wasn't ready. Would earlier feedback have helped more than additional private polishing?

Shrink Step

Complete one important task to "good enough." Observe whether meaningful progress creates more momentum than continued refinement.

Shrink Minute

Most remarkable work begins before it feels ready.

Shrink Takeaway

Finished teaches. Perfect waits.

Medical boundary

This concept is educational and shouldn't be used to self-diagnose. It doesn't replace care from a licensed clinician. Symptoms, medication, and treatment decisions should be discussed with a qualified professional, and emergency symptoms require emergency care.

Evidence summary

Research distinguishes adaptive striving from maladaptive perfectionistic concerns. Maladaptive perfectionism has been associated with anxiety, depression, burnout, procrastination, reduced well-being, and self-critical thinking. Educational Boundary This concept is educational. Perfectionism exists on a continuum and isn't, by itself, a diagnosis.

Sources

American Psychological Association (APA); Peer-reviewed scientific literature

Reference status: authorities listed citation pending