I find comparison to others be a constant battle. (The prompt for this post was a need to nut out my own anxieties around the subject.)
Wouldn’t the road of life be easier if there was no competition?
I quite like the idea of being alone in the world, with no one beside me to size myself up against. Without the pressure of another’s existence, I can imagine that I would be quite content to do, be and have whatever I please, for there would be no measure but my own internal guidance system. There would be no time pressures and no fear of failure, because the time I took and the mistakes I made would be relevant only to myself.
When we compare ourselves to others, we are assessing the similarities or dissimilarities between us and them. Comparison is a natural thing to do, for we humans are all about belonging, and comparison contributes to our need to assess where we fit in with the rest of the tribe (society). My theory, then, is that comparison is directly linked with a fear of not belonging.
What if we could have both? What if we could be sure of our place in this world (belonging) whilst also maintaining the impression of living only for ourselves?
Comparison serves a purpose, which I believe you can harness to work for you rather than against you. To clarify, therefore, this post isn’t necessarily about stopping comparison for good, but rather, about adjusting your relationship to comparison so that it causes less harm.
Everything in life is a matter of perspective. In pursuit of greater empowerment, freedom, joy and authenticity for myself and my readers, I desire to crack open the topic of comparison. Here are my 5 tips to stop comparing yourself to others:
‘Comparison is the thief of joy’
–Theodore Roosevelt
Basically, it makes you feel crap when you compare yourself to others, and this is because it takes you out of alignment with yourself.
Imagine that you are encompassed by a vortex of energy. Another mental image for this could be a tornado. Encompassed by this rapidly rotating whirlwind of energy is all that you are; your unique standpoint. Your individual dreams, desires and needs; your tendency to love and be joyful; your ecstasy and abundance. Abraham Hicks calls this your ‘vortex of creation’. I liken it to your individual ‘God’ energy, or Higher Self. This is who you truly are.
Our emotions serve as a guide, where the better we feel, the more aligned we are with our Higher Power. Positive emotion, therefore, is your compass.
When you step outside of your unique vortex of creation, you often feel bad.
When I compare myself to others, I feel worthlessness, despair and doubt. These emotions are at the lower end of the emotional scale, indicating that I am not vibrating at the frequency of my all-loving authentic self, where all is always well.
When you turn to another for guidance in the form of comparison, the suffering you feel is real. I think of it as your Higher Self looking down on you, like, ‘Excuse me! Over here. Y’all are looking in the wrong direction!’
When you envy somebody, it is because you recognise that they have something that you desire. If you didn’t desire it, you wouldn’t feel envy. This is because the opposite of genuine desire (love) is indifference.
Here’s where you can shift your perspective. Rather than envy somebody for the thing that they have that you want, recognise that they are showing you what you want. This is all a matter of mindset.
When we feel envious, we are experiencing resistance to our desire. We feel envy because negative self-beliefs have been triggered. We therefore feel negative emotion rather than positive emotion when we think about the thing that we desire. If the negative self-beliefs weren’t there, then our desires would be accompanied by emotions of excitement and positive expectation.
There is a lesson, therefore, in those that you envy, and this is why they are your expanders. They show you your potential.
The bottom line?
Think of comparison as a potential for growth rather than evidence of your failure.
It sounds cliche, but it is totally relevant and totally true:
‘Be yourself, everyone else is already taken.’
– Oscar Wilde
You came forth as a unique individual with specific wants and needs, ready to have a good time in this life.
Comparison (when it leads to suffering and that whole thread of self doubt) is basically a means of self rejection. You are denying your individual journey by telling yourself that you should be somebody that you are not. What if you are exactly who and where you intended to be?
You are you for a reason, and your journey is as necessary and as sacred as the next persons.
Don’t fall too much for the materialistic measures of success that society and the media feed us, for they are not as they appear.
(I wrote a post on success that goes into detail on this. You can check it out here: What does it truly mean to be successful?)
I believe that a person’s life purpose is more subtle than we tend to think it is. I like to consider this with Meryl Streep. On the outside, many might perceive her as superior due to the material success and fame that she has acquired. She is deemed ‘the best actress in the world’, but this doesn’t necessarily define her, nor her life’s purpose. Her purpose in this life might be to learn more about compassion by considering other people’s perspectives. Here, acting just so happens to be the right journey to assist in the learning of this life purpose.
I guess what I’m saying is: You never know what is going on behind the scenes. An individual’s journey is structured in a way that best allows them to grow in the way that their soul uniquely desires. The purpose of life is expansion, and only the soul knows what it needs to expand.
An individual’s journey is a predominantly subconscious process, and the timing of actualisation will always be right.
Believe, therefore, in right timing. Billie Eilish may have won a Grammy at 18, but this doesn’t reflect her ability to align with success over yours. It simply means that this was the experience Billie needed to be able to expand in the way her soul uniquely required at that point in time.
I’ve said this before, and I’m going to say it again: Put your blinders on. Horse blinders are firm leather squares that attach to a horse’s bridle and prevent the horse from seeing behind and beside him. The idea is to stop the horse from getting distracted or ‘spooked’. There’s no shame in just shutting it all out if it becomes too overwhelming.
One way I actively put my blinders on is with social media. I am very particular about who I follow. I go by my intuition, as well as my emotions. If it (the content) makes me feel good, then I’ll keep it in my circle. If it makes me feel bad, I’ll remove it from my field of vision. That way, I can guarantee that my social media feed won’t provoke me in a way that encourages negative thoughts and self doubt.
Saying that, be mindful of your expanders. It’s good to be challenged every now and then, and it may serve you to think about why you’re being triggered by certain people or content. Only you can know.
Be kind to yourself and respect your individual journey.