“You can’t measure your success against someone else when you don’t have the same starting point.”
"A happy runner compares himself to his last run, not to others who are faster." - Sonja Lyubomirsky
In a world where we’re constantly overconsumed and barraged by social media, our sense of adequacy and self-worth lingers in the hands of comparison. The truth is, we can always say someone else seems to have life “figured out.” Someone else might seem more intelligent, more successful, wealthier; the list goes on. Anytime our mind looms in comparison mode, we become too busy consumed in other people’s success rather than living the life we truly want.
As humans, our minds are programmed to put greater emphasis on the negative. Therefore, when we get sucked into the comparison trap, we overlook the positive and focus on where we fall short. Get this, “we always compare the worst version of ourselves to someone’s best version.” Yup! You may want to read that again!
It’s natural to want to be good at things. However, when success is merely measured by comparing ourselves to others, it only becomes unfair for both parties. We all come from different upbringings, experiences, cultures, and challenges. Weighing our accomplishments against someone else’s can make us feel like we are on opposite ends of a balance beam, a harmful comparison that can undermine our goals and happiness. It’s like expecting a baby to learn how to walk without teaching them how to crawl – everyone has their timeline. You may look at people around you and think they are ahead of you, but they may just be living at their own pace. Don’t rush yourself to beat someone else’s clock:
Start here:
1) Celebrate the progress, not the result: Think about the journey that got you to this point. Never underestimate the power of small victories, and remind yourself that any progress is still progress, no matter how little.
2) What are you telling yourself? What you tell yourself is fuel to what you’re about to do next. Am I falling victim to other people’s narratives and expectations of myself? Catching that record from spinning and influencing your behaviour can prevent the same music from playing in your brain.
3) Create space and time to seek connections, hobbies, and personal interests that will help foster your inner strengths.
Remember, setting the goal to become fully confident can sometimes be part of the problem. Sometimes it’s okay not to know. It’s okay to have to work towards something. It’s okay to try again and try things at your own pace or differently. Good luck on YOUR journey.
Author - Justina Barsoum
“Success includes failure. Don’t let anyone tell you otherwise. It is part of the equation.”
When given the option between failure and success, success is the preferred conversation for most. When we think of success, we associate it with benefits such as material, social and personal gains, to mention a few. After all, success is the positive consequence of one’s achievements. The problem is that most success stories appear to promote success as the goal without emphasizing what the process to success may include. Unless you're perfect, which no one is, success will most likely include failure. It's literally a part of life. Trust me; I get that the possibility of failure can be terrifying. Failing means that you didn't meet your expectations, but it doesn't mean you WON’T succeed. It means that way didn't work, and you can try something different. Don’t let your worth and capabilities run away with something that didn't work out. Don't give it that power!
Start Here:
Think about past experiences where you struggled initially but ultimately succeeded.
Identify how struggling made you feel and what encouraged you to continue.
Moving forward, give yourself permission to be imperfect and reframe what your failure means—for example, looking at mistakes as opportunities for growth and learning.
Remind yourself that experiencing failure makes you human.
Failure may be viewed as a blessing or a curse, depending on whether you perceive it as a roadblock or a stepping stone. Failure doesn't have to be your end destination, nor does it have to define you.
Author- Letiesha Dunn
Openness and vulnerability does not only come from sharing your past. It’s also found in communicating what you would like to see moving forward.
“Staying vulnerable is a risk we have to take if we want to experience connection.” – Brené Brown
When we think about vulnerability, we often think of oversharing about our past traumas and negative experiences. While this may be helpful in opening ourselves up to people in certain contexts, it is not a necessity when forming connections. Sometimes the past can hold painful memories or feelings that cannot be shared with others. On the other hand, sometimes sharing these experiences empowers us and leads to the development of vulnerability and openness. However, only sharing the past without focusing on the future may be counterproductive in relationships. It is important to transform our past experiences into life lessons for what we need moving forward.
Start Here:
Think about your past experiences, thoughts, and emotions, and use these to identify your current and future needs.
Once you identify your needs, create boundaries for yourself. For example, this can look like physical boundaries, sexual boundaries, financial boundaries, or other non-negotiable boundaries.
While forming or deepening connections with others, practice vulnerability by sharing the past but also conveying your needs and boundaries moving forward.
Focusing on the future and communicating our needs and boundaries with others allows us to practice self-care and ensure we protect ourselves. This also encourages healthy and open communication in relationships, further strengthening our connections.
Author- Sharva Katagi
Your strength didn’t disappear with what you’ve lost. It is in what you have left.
"Di daakest paat a di night a when day suu light" - Jamaican Proverb
The darkest part of the night is just before dawn. – English Translation
Meaning: Your worst experience is sometimes the source of great change and a pivotal moment of your inner strength
After experiencing trauma, loss or any life event that has left us with the residue of negative impact, it is easy to assume that we are left in a physical and emotional deficit. We might feel hopeless, inferior, used, mistreated, manipulated, and hold onto many regrets. Regrets of our choices, regrets of the event, regrets we ignored the red flags and begin to replay what we could have done differently.
We sometimes carry feelings of disappointment in others and disappointment in ourselves. A feeling of disappointment in self can be the root or start of self-inflicted pain. Self-inflicted pain chips at our self-esteem as we count the loss and create a daily cycle of replaying the situation. This cycle is sometimes fixated on regrets and ignites feelings of hopelessness and can sometimes convince you that you have lost all strength and all hope and can never overcome what has happened.
But guess what? Your strength didn’t disappear with what you’ve lost. It is what you have left!
Despite what happened, you are still here, and light is ahead. Make room for the triumphant person that takes it day by day, and one step at a time. You can regain your strength and some additional strength because you have overcome a situation you thought was your defeat.
Start Here:
1. Validate your feelings and what you have been through. Feel your feelings, and know that it is normal to feel the way you do. It is normal to feel like all strength is lost with what you have been through.
2. Rise from it: Don't isolate yourself. Welcome environments that will help you regain your strength and develop new strengths, such as friends, family and therapeutic relationships that will help you process what you have been through as you share how you feel and rise from the situation that you once thought would have been a monument to a story centred around defeat.
Your strength did not disappear with what you have lost; it is what you have left!
Author- Albertina Hinds
“Sometimes where you’re meant to go means leaving things behind.”
It all begins with an idea.
When we think about the people, places and things we leave behind, it can feel really heavy and sad. Here's another way to look at it.
Think about it as putting away the things you've already learned, enjoyed and experienced; so you can make room for what you need to pick up on the road ahead. Life is a journey, and you'll need room for all the people and things you have yet to love.
Start Here:
1. Ask yourself what you've learned from what you are placing aside.
2. Think about what you want to gain as you move forward.