Youâre jealous because your coworker just got a new red sports car and your car is a beat up 90âs Honda. Youâre upset because you werenât selected for the super duper high profile project but your arch nemesis from work did. Your ex is posting cozy pictures of her new boyfriend all over social media and youâre home alone on a Grey’s Anatomy binge. You feel inadequate. You feel sorry for yourself. You are on the comparison Highway to Inadequacy. You need to get off that highway and focus on your own path.

Iâm a speaker. An executive coach. A mother. A dog owner. An author. I donât get paid what Tony Robbins gets paid to speak. I donât have the same client list as Marshall Goldsmith. My kids (are awesome) but they arenât on the cover of Time magazine or on a Wheaties box (yet). My dog hasnât won any Westminster Dog Shows. I havenât written a single book and, therefore, never sold one. The point is, how high is that bar for you? If I compared myself to everyone around me on all aspects of my life, I would be sorely disappointed. Stick to your path and quit looking at everyone elseâs.
Here are some ways to do that:
- Acceptance. Be Ok with the path that is in front of you. I was stuck in a should cycle for nine months on decisions regarding the rebuilding of my house post-Hurricane Matthew. I should have purchased all new cabinets. I should have bought new kitchen furniture. I should have gone with a different electrician. This is wearing you down. All that âshould-ingâ. Accept what decisions you have made and move forward. All that should-ing is making you dwell on the past and draining you.
- Different. I love this quote from Internal Acceptance Movement: âEveryone has their own unique journey. A path thatâs right for someone else wonât necessarily be a path thatâs right for you. Your path isnât right or wrong, or good or bad. Itâs just different.â What I try to do, say when I see that new red sports car in the company parking lot, is tell myself: âWow. Suzy really likes cars. Good for her.â Everyone values different things, be it material possessions or experiences. I love to travel and maybe my son doesnât. We are on different paths and thatâs OK.
- Pace. This is my biggest problem. I am always in forward motion. I want to accomplish the next thing. I want it done yesterday. This makes me incredibly impatient with other folks who operate on a different pace (i.e.: slower). It doesnât bring out my best side. As I tap my fingers, waiting for a response to ten rapid fire texts to my assistant. Take a breath and connect with your inner Buddha. Acknowledge your pace and quit trying to have people get on board with your pace. Thatâs how people start to stumble. Stay in lane and keep your own pace and donât worry about anyone elseâs.
- Suspend. I know youâve done this. You see that your coworker has put on weight or is wearing something that, from your vantage point, is unattractive. You pass judgment in your head. âWow. Janet needs to drop a few poundsâ or âWhat made her think that looked good on her?â Itâs difficult to suspend judgment but you can label it. Say instead, âSo Cathy, this is what judgment looks like.â Step away from the comparing paths and label it.
- Present. Be in this moment right now. And now. And now. Donât try and recreate history. No, your ex is not coming back and thatâs OK right now. Trust that the path you are on is just fine and itâs taking you in the right direction. Donât âcatastrophicizeâ the future. Sometimes paths cross and itâs lovely, and there are wonderful memories made, and then they uncross. There will be new paths to cross in the future. As you walk your path, be present.
You may not end up where you intended to go but you will be off of the Highway of Inadequacy. Trust you are exactly where you need to be. Trust that you are enough. You are enough.