Infuse 5.5 FNCE Special Edition | Page 29
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“Good enough” is usually good
Use your perfection-
ism sparingly:
I choose which items/
projects I want to make
“perfect” and those that
I can live with as less
than “ perfect”.
Don’t dwell – move on:
6
I try to learn from the
mistakes along the way and
not dwell on them (for more
than 24 hours, anyway!).
We are all human, and we
all make mistakes, as the
cliché says.
8
7
Congratulate
yourself when you
finish a project:
It’s important to
reward yourself for
completing a project, even if
it isn’t perfect, and reflect on
how far you have come as a
perfectionist. I’m not very good
at this one, but I’m
trying to do this more often,
especially for larger
projects.
Put on your
blinders: I swim in my
own lane and don’t look
at what others are doing
or compare myself to
other people. This can be a
perfectionist trap.
© Dietitian Connection
enough: I remind myself it’s better
to have something out there for the
world to read and learn from, rather
than agonising over the details and not
hitting the “publish” button. I aim for
good enough. You can’t make something
better if you don’t start with version 1.0.
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Infuse | October 2018 - Special FNCE issue