Home→Forums→Tough Times→Paralysing perfectionism/depression.
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July 16, 2015 at 10:22 am #79954FilipParticipant
Dear Tiny Buddha community,
This is my first post on this forum. I felt the need to express the problem that I have been going through recently to seek your opinion on how to tackle it. The problem is my perfectionism as well as self-criticism. I am persistently dealing with negative and highly destructive thoughts directed against my ability to speak in English. Let me provide some basic background info before going into detail. I have lived in London for over 2 years now. Before that, I lived in Poland and Polish is my native language. I came here partly because I had fallen in love and partly because I wanted to study and develop my language. I recently successfully finished 1st year of university, reading law. Ever since I came though, I have always been very self-conscious about speaking in English. I strive to speak English fluently. Hardly a day goes by without me making an effort to learn something new. Ironically thought, I tend to avoid people and social situations where I have to speak in English. Making a mistake or saying something wrong leaves me feeling inadequate and very frustrated. I can’t help but think that it will never change. I keep saying to myself that I will never achieve anything, that I will never be fluent. Successes I have achieved don’t help at all. It’s getting to a stage that all day long I am picturing myself explaining something to someone in English. If there is something on my mind that I can’t explain in a way that would satisfy me, I get very upset. For example, the books I read, TV programmes I watch, conversations I have – everything has to be translated or ‘described’ in order to prove to myself I can say anything I want. I become very fixated on these things. It’s a vicious circle.
I am aware of the fact that most of these problems are imaginary and are not a representation of my ability. Nevertheless, I am losing faith and feel defenceless in my fight against this pessimism and negativity that affects literally every aspect of my life and the closest people to me.
Have you experienced any similar problems? What would you recommend I should do?
Thank you so much for reading.
Sorry about the long post.July 16, 2015 at 11:46 am #79959AnonymousGuestDear floydlip:
You are suffering from the attack of the abominable Toxic Inner Critic (TIC), your superego, in Fruedan terms. This part of you is vicious and will beat you up mercilessly unless you develop and practice SKILLS to manage this toxic inner critic.
To be able to disengage from the thinking of the TIC, to quiet that agitation of the mind, you stop thinking by focusing on sounds you hear. Once your attention is on what you hear, you give yourself a break from your thinking (the TIC giving you a hard time and you arguing with the TIC, trying to prove it wrong, trying to appease it, whatever). The focus on sounds is disengaging from the part of your brain engaged with the TIC and engaging another part. You can also focus on your breathing. Meditating on your breathing or sounds is a skill that will ease the torture, calm you down. There is more to it, of course.
One thing though- you can’t win with the TIC. You can’t win him over to … your side. disengage. It is like dealing with an abusive person outside of you. You can talk and talk to him until you are blue in the face and he will still win. The solution is get away from the abusive person. Unfortunately when that abusive person is living in your head- you can’t just leave- but there are skills and over time, you will be surprised how well you can manage yourself!
anita
July 20, 2015 at 5:40 am #80123AxudaParticipantHi floydlip
My first observation is that your written English is excellent, and considerably better than many native English speakers, so you certainly have no issues in that area. And English is a language with very flexible rules of grammar. (Technically I shouldn’t have started the previous sentence with “and”, but you will see it in top-quality newspapers.) But I understand that speaking a language is very different – I have the same issue with German – and when you are a perfectionist it can be paralysing, as you say.
Another good thing is that you are living in London, which must have by far the highest proportion of non-native English speakers of any English-speaking city, and is (in my experience) the most tolerant city on Earth. So if there is one city in the world where you don’t need to feel concerned or embarrassed about your ability to speak English, it is London.
So there should be nothing about your ability, or others’ interpretation of your ability, that is holding you back – just your own perfectionism. As a fellow sufferer, I know how difficult this can be.
There have been many times in my life when I have been paralysed by perfectionism – where I have failed to take action because I wasn’t ready to do it perfectly, whilst others less capable than me went on and succeeded. I have largely overcome this problem now, but it has been a struggle, and it never leaves completely – I will re-read this post 6 times before I hit “Submit”. I think it arises from a feeling that any criticism of my work is a criticism of me as a human being. So if someone doesn’t like what I do, it feels as if they don’t like who I am. That is nonsense of course, but the feeling remains.
The fact that you have successfully completed the first year of a law degree shows that you can conquer this problem. As a perfectionist, I am sure that you wrote and re-wrote your papers many times, and checked them constantly. But at some point, you had to hand them in – you had to accept that it was good enough. Did you get 100% for every paper you submitted? Probably not. But it was good enough, wasn’t it? And by submitting your work, you were able to find out the areas you need to work on to improve.
You just need to apply the same principle to your spoken English. Whenever you speak to another person, it is like submitting a paper for your studies. Will it be perfect? Probably not. But it will almost certainly be good enough to get you what you want. And any areas of difficulty and confusion are not something to be embarrassed by, but a learning opportunity.
The way I conquered my issues with perfectionism was simply to dive in and start doing things. It was very painful at first – the criticism still hurt – but I quickly realised that only a few things were being criticised, and I was actually achieving far more than I had ever realised I was capable of. By focusing on the 80% I was getting right, I could tolerate the 20% I was getting wrong. And I realised that getting 20% wrong was actually less embarrassing than trying to explain why the other 80% hadn’t been done.
So the solution I recommend is – just do it. You will find that you will rarely make a mistake, and if you do, no-one cares because they still understand you anyway. If someone corrects you, they are trying to help, not criticise. If I tried to speak to you in Polish, I am sure you would try to help me – you wouldn’t treat me as stupid for trying. London is full of people who can’t speak English as well as you can – and some of them were born in the city!
Powodzenia!
July 20, 2015 at 7:50 am #80126AnonymousGuestDear floydlip and Axuda:
I enjoyed reading your comment, Exuda. Only yesterday I was riding in the car to a party. I noticed the need to be liked by the people I was about to meet, the fear of not being liked, my desire to be myself and the fear that being myself is not good enough, is disapprovable, to be criticized…
And I thought of all those people in my whole life (I am 54) whose disapproval and criticism I feared and I couldn’t remember a single face of that crowd of previous parties, hundreds of people whose criticism i so feared and yet I couldn’t remember a single face.
And I realized that the only person I do remember in all those parties and events I was about to attend, all those years, was my own person, my own face, anxious and dreading what was to come.
All those people so important in my mind have always be people of no consequence to me- don’t remember a thing about them. ALl that mattered in my life and all that matters is the one person i carry around with me everywhere I go- that is me.
I had a better time at the party yesterday than I remember ever having. i was myself. A side note: as is a part of healing, there is always distress in changing- there is no “happily ever after” all problems solved. Patience. But healing is happening.
anita
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