For as long as I can remember, I’ve struggled with the need to be perfect.
I didn’t always call it that, though. Others accused me of being a perfectionist and I was honestly confused by the label. My life was anything but perfect, so how could anyone accuse me of that?
Eventually, I came to understand that my life was horribly imperfect — in an unhealthy way — because I felt such guilt about not being perfect. I allowed major chunks of my life to become wrecks simply because I was so afraid of not being perfect that something in me went in the opposite direction. If I couldn’t be perfect at something, I didn’t do it. The perverse inner logic seemed to be that if I didn’t even try, I hadn’t failed. I simply hadn’t cared enough to try.
I understand now where that guilt about being imperfect came from, but that’s not my concern here. I’m more interested in something I’ve seen in myself lately — some indications that maybe I’m starting to get past this lifelong struggle.

Youth and death are bookends pointing toward truth between
U.S. wasted $60 billion in war funds: Is anyone honestly surprised?
DC hypocrites act like spoiled kids on playground by pointing fingers
Barbarians with evil ideas taking our entire culture off deadly cliff
FRIDAY FUNNIES
Film hurts when I hear, ‘I’ve seen what we can be like together’
Why do we consider it shallow to crave beauty in romantic partner?