Confessions of a Recovering Perfectionist – Part 135

There’s an old saying: “Show me a person’s friends and I’ll show you the person.”

I recently came across a quote from Yohan Delton that got me thinking about the influence others have on me:

One of the things that struck me about this quote is how much it clashes with perfectionism.

Perfectionism tells us that life is all about fixing ourselves. We think if we can just work hard enough, improve enough, and get rid of enough weaknesses, we’ll finally become the person we’re supposed to be. It’s a very lonely way of looking at growth. It assumes that becoming better is mostly an individual project.

But when I look back on my own life, that’s not really how growth has happened.

Different people have brought out different parts of me. Some people bring out my sense of humor. Some bring out compassion. Some bring out confidence. And, if I’m being honest, some people bring out my insecurities, my impatience, and my perfectionism. Those relationships didn’t create those parts of me, but they revealed them.

That’s one reason I think perfectionism can be so frustrating. It wants us to be consistent, polished, and in control all the time. Real life doesn’t work that way. We are constantly discovering new things about ourselves through our interactions with other people. Sometimes we discover strengths we didn’t know we had. Sometimes we discover wounds that still need healing.

I also think this helps explain why church can be such a powerful place for growth. If I got to hand-pick everyone in my ward, I’d probably choose people who think like me, vote like me, and see the world like me. But that’s not how the Lord designed it. Instead, He puts us in a community with people we would never have chosen on our own. As frustrating as that can be at times, those relationships often stretch us in ways we wouldn’t experience otherwise.

The part of Delton’s quote that I keep coming back to is his observation about Christ. If other people can bring out parts of us that we can’t access on our own, imagine what happens when we spend time with the Savior.

Perfectionism says, “Become better, then come to Christ.”

Jesus says, “Come to Me, and together we’ll work on becoming better.”

Maybe the goal of life isn’t to create a perfect version of ourselves through sheer effort. Maybe the goal is to stay connected (to Christ and to other people) and allow those relationships to draw out the person God always knew we could become.