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.

How one woman’s grand gesture for love turned into a nightmare
She’s miserable in life she chose, but she’s too proud to change now
Real-life ‘ghost story’: The tale of a house that didn’t want me there
Six months after her death, I like to believe Lucy is waiting for me
Happiness and success elude me unless I’m doing something I love
Why does most love hurt us? Because one usually loves more
How do we often know things which we shouldn’t really know?
If there are exceptions to free speech, it’s not really free speech, is it?