• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer
Kykeon Coaching

Kykeon Coaching

Lighting the Way For Young Leaders of Today!

Menu
  • About
  • Sponsors
  • Assessments
  • Coaching
    • Personal Performance Coaching
    • Kykeon Life Coaching
    • Kykeon Career Coaching
    • Entrepreneur Business Coaching
  • Retreats
  • Small Group Workshops
  • Contact

Perfectionism

My Thoughts on Perfectionism and Listening to Your Body

June 3, 2022 by Anonymous

I’m a chronic overachiever. A perfectionist. I pride myself in my ability to give 110% in ~most~ of the things I do (even if self-prescribed). When asked about my strengths, I oftentimes find myself pointing out this idea in perfectionism that I will work harder than those around me which ripples itself in a variety of ways throughout my daily life. 

When asked about my hobbies, I look to weightlifting–a hobby that I perform 6 days a week. One that I feel guilty about when I don’t participate in it. Professionally, I could not begin to count the amount of times I have sacrificed sleep in order to get more tasks done or acquire knowledge that I may regurgitate onto an exam the next day. Many times, I view leisure activities as a ‘waste of time’ as one could argue that the hours could be better spent on refining my skills to seem more attractive to future employers. 

Perhaps you find yourself in this thought loop where your brain justifies these thought patterns because you view it as competitive. But, here’s the thing that you, and I, need to hear the most: 

IT IS UNHEALTHY.

No matter the amount of evidence that could be used as an argument towards the approach of life in this way; it will not change the fact that this thought process is toxic and sows the seeds of unhappiness early in our lives. Within recent months, I have decided to take on a new ideology motion through the demands and responsibilities of mortal life and that is:

To listen to my body. 

I apply this concept broadly within my life. When approaching physical activity, it doesn’t mean I am constantly skipping days in the gym if I don’t feel like going because this would be counterintuitive to my goals.

I want to be healthy. I want to be fit. But that should not come at the cost of needless stress placed on myself to hit certain benchmarks. This simply means I become more in-tune with the way my body feels before, during, and after my workouts. 

I focus less on the number on the scale or the amount of weight on each side of the barbell. I simply monitor my mind to muscle connection. If my chest is sore or fatigued on my scheduled “push-day” workout, I will substitute variations of a pull-focused workout within my regiment. If I don’t feel particularly strong one day, I will lower the weight and focus on the eccentric movements within each repetition.

I don’t simply brute force myself through a workout because I feel like I need to. I listen to what my body tells me. This has not only allowed me to feel more confident in myself but has allowed me to find more joy in my workout routine. 

This principle applies in my work as well. If I am tired, instead of hyping myself up on caffeine to stay up an extra 3-5 hours, I take this as a sign that I should go to bed early, get a good night’s rest, and have an early start the next day. If I don’t feel particularly attuned to my studies, it may be a sign that I need to take a break. I’ll carve out time to organize my space, watch an episode of my favorite Netflix show, or simply take a 15-minute nap.

Holding yourself to such a high standard with no room for faults will ultimately result in burn-out. I view my social time as a needed break from my studies and an opportunity to create lifelong bonds with my roommates. 

This realization and subsequent action arose from recognizing that your most valuable asset is yourself. You wouldn’t push your car to run 100,000 miles past its need for an oil change. This will result in a variety of issues that require way more money and time than if you had simply taken the time to get an oil change when the issue arose. I view my body in a similar manner. We are human. We need maintenance, and we need to listen to our inner workings to ensure that we can continue operating at a high capacity. 

But, even aside from this fact

of high performance, our life is meant to be enjoyed. Compounding stress will only leave you less present in the moment. By becoming more attentive to your needs on an instance basis, you will be able to act reactively rather than constantly proactively. 

And maybe that’s the true essence of it all. To recognize that life is unpredictable. We can plan all we want–outlining each specific action that will increase the probability of a future outcome. But where is the beauty in that? I now like to think that I live each day more enveloped within my activities and with a healthier mindset than before. I listen to my body and my body thanks me for that.   

Filed Under: Blog, Productivity, Self-Care Tagged With: listening to your body, mythoughtsonperfectionismandlisteningtoyourbody, Perfectionism, personal growth

Im-Perfectionism

November 13, 2019 by Jon Salmen

Perfectionists struggle because they overthink, over evaluate, and constantly find themselves in a state of analysis paralysis. Perfectionists that don’t try? They find themselves perfectly mediocre. Perfect at being conservative, certain, and safe. Perfect at being just barely enough, stable, and empty. Perfect at avoiding obstacles, perfect at avoiding fear, and ultimately perfect at avoiding growth.

“Problems are the gifts to which we grow”- Tony Robbins

What is perfect? It doesn’t exist. The concept it represents is ideal, not real. You can not be an ideal. We can merely be close. That is true. But, in the end, we determine what is fulfilling. Your idea of perfect is a social construct, and so is mine and they don’t match up. It is just the channel you have likely subscribed to in your life for many just reasons. However this is not the agora, so I digress.

It is said that our greatest fear is rejection. Rejection as an absence or exclusion from someone or something in one way or another. Rejected and absent from a life of love. Excluded from society. Rejected in the eyes of a creator/ God. We fear that our lives will be absent of this approval. You fear that you will be rejected for who you are so, in defense, you strive to be perfect. 

But what we really fear is not being enough. Enough to be loved, to be accepted, to be adored, looked up to, smiled back on. That we matter enough to leave a legacy. I say it is because we feel rejected for the things we didn’t do, perhaps the things that we have not yet finished. We don’t feel like we are good enough to earn this approval from others. We believe we are not worthy of some ideal standard. 

We aren’t. You aren’t. I am not. But guess what? Neither is anyone else. Nobody leads a perfect life and you are not going to be the first. But you can strive to mitigate imperfections by tackling obstacles. Acquaint yourself with the enemies within and around you. You can only run so far with weights around your ankles and maybe your weights are a constant unrealistic desire to become a you that you can really never become.

“If you know the enemy and know yourself, you need not fear the result of a hundred battles…” -SunTzu
The answer? Try things. Get out and do. Go out and be. As Taco Bell says, “Live mas”. 

Know your doubts and know your faith to overcome them. If you don’t have the perfect plan, you still try. Trying is fundamental to achieving. Trying is the best approach to any problem you have. Trying is perfect. Faith is perfect. Neither guarantee success, but the resilience to keep on trying and keep faith even when it seems impossible? That is as perfect as it gets. If we don’t try because we are afraid our effort won’t be perfect, we would surely find ourselves in a very imperfect place. Lazy, apathetic, and disheartened more often than not.

If we played a game we always knew we would win, we would certainly stop enjoying it. Perfectionism is not a virtue. It is a myth. One that has likely been discouraging you from living, so stop trying to be perfect and start trying to be better.

 Life is ambiguous and uncertain. It’s a gamble and you can take your chances. But I promise if you try your very best and you courageous enough to execute even the smallest imperfect plan when others won’t. That is momentum, inspiration, achievement… perhaps even perfect.

Filed Under: Motivation Tagged With: Achievement, Balance, Fear, FocalPointKY, Goal Setting, Motivation, Perfectionism, Self-help, Success

Footer

 
  • About
  • Sponsors
  • Assessments
  • Coaching
  • Retreats
  • Small Group Workshops
  • Contact

© 2026 Kykeon Coaching • Privacy Policy

  • About
  • Sponsors
  • Assessments
  • Coaching
    • Personal Performance Coaching
    • Kykeon Life Coaching
    • Kykeon Career Coaching
    • Entrepreneur Business Coaching
    • Back
  • Retreats
  • Small Group Workshops
  • Contact