Sizzling Hot Tip for 20something Success: Compare Obsessively

Nothing is more vital to twentysomething success than comparing yourself in every way, at every step, to everyone, both near, and far.

Family, friends, acquaintances, enemies, Seth Godin, Justin Bieber, Jon Favreau, Jon Acuff — all are fair game, all are incredible motivational tools if you just allow yourself to study them at every angle and decipher how they have done their lives much better than yours.

Pour over your friends’ Facebook profiles. Find all those at the same age who have “Director” or “Vice-President” in their title. Go through every picture of her My Life is Awesome Album.

Measure how big their smiles are. Study their well behaved kids. Figure out the square footage of their newly remodeled house. Look at how nice their husband’s suit is. Find the brand. Google it. See how much it must have cost. Go buy a more expensive suit for your husband. Lease a BMW. Take a picture. Put it in your My Life is Awesome-er Album.

We used to only be able to accomplish this feat of full out, look-you-up-and-down-comparison, at our ten year reunion. But now with Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube we have the opportunity to compare ourselves to everyone, every, single, day. What a blessing.

“The key to success is comparing yourself to everyone, everyday. Then let that anxiety and fear propel you to work harder, faster, and with more motivation.” ~ Guy Who Had Nervous Breakdown at 33

Once you have studied, and obsessed, and found all the ways THEIR story is so much better than YOURS — like the jockey’s whip on the winning horse, you can use all this information as a measuring stick to smack your rear end into action. And pull down your pants first so that you can really feel the sting.Cure for Obsessive Comparison Disorder

OBSESSIVE COMPARISON DISORDER

Or don’t.

Don’t compare yourself to THEM.

Don’t cram YOUR plotline into someone else’s story. You’re not them. They’re not you. Your story doesn’t fit in theirs.

I’d be like watching When Harry Met Sally and then all of the sudden Shawshank Redemption cuts in. Billy Crystal wouldn’t have worked crawling through a sewer pipe to escape from prison. Billy Crystal worked with Meg Ryan.

If we try to cram two separate stories together, then we’ll have a fragmented life that has no idea who or what it is — a story that will ultimately bomb at the box office.

YOUR STORY

So yes, be inspired by others stories but do not let their story dwarf yours. Do not become inflicted by Obsessive Comparison Disorder – a disease that runs ramped in American culture today. A disease that tells us to buy things we shouldn’t.A disease that devours Bubonic-Plague-Style creativity, energy, and peace — three vital characteristics you are going to need to write your story really well.

So the next time you find yourself wishing your life could be theirs, lingering a little too long on their Facebook Album as you fight the fight of Obsessive Compulsive Disorder, remember:

“The the grass is always greener on the other side, until you get there, and realize it’s because of all the manure.” ~ Paul Angone Original (Imagine That!)

6 Comments

  1. mike

    YESSSSSS! Great words, Paul. One of the biggest risks of Obsessive Comparison Disorder is this: I begin to believe that the way I see other people’s lives is HOW LIFE SHOULD BE. I stop looking to truth, to full life, to God.

    As a pastor (you know, that group of people with all the answers…. er…. uhhh….), this happens with other churches. I spend hours of every week looking at and thinking about the way such and such church did their worship, the way such and such pastor did his preaching, the look of such and such a website. And I’m thinking that this doesn’t happen just for pastors…. but for everyone. You like bikes: what kind of bike does so and so ride? You like poetry: what kind of poetry does so and so read? Suddenly, I have no idea what I want, who I am… just a lot of info on who everyone else is. And how I suck compared to them.

    All that to say: wow, bro. You nailed it.

    Reply
    • admin

      “Suddenly, I have no idea what I want, who I am… just a lot of info on who everyone else is. And how I suck compared to them.” Great line Mike! The core issue of Obsessive Comparison Disorder.

      Reply
  2. Jocelyn

    Paul, I’m totally borrowing/stealing/using your awesome quote at the end … but don’t worry, I’ll totally give you the credit for those clever/brilliant words 🙂

    Reply
    • admin

      Thanks Jocelyn!

      Reply
  3. Naomi

    Awesome LAST Line, PAUL!!!! Love the touch of “manure”. I will be stealing this phrase as well!

    Reply
    • admin

      Thanks Naomi!

      Reply

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