When you aim for perfection, you discover it’s a moving target. — George Fisher

Inappropriate attention to detail may be killing your creativity.

Many perfectionists have unrealistic expectations of themselves without knowing it. It destroys creative lives. Perfectionism takes away time, money, and resources. It’s an unattainable illusion. If you want to be the best at anything, you need to be the best at practicing and iterating more than anyone else and knowing when to let go. Perfection is an endless productivity loop.

Anyone working in a creative field knows the relentless pursuit of perfection is time-consuming. The urge to get things just right never goes away. Strive to do your very best, but don’t aim for perfection.

The lack of perfection does not mean a lack of quality. Abandoning perfection doesn’t mean you should settle or make lazy excuses for your work. It’s great to have high creative standards and strive for excellence. But at any point in your creative process, you have to know when you’ve contributed enough to tip the scales close enough towards perfection without compromising the rest of your work.

The perils of perfect

“Perfectionism is not a quest for the best. It is a pursuit of the worst in ourselves, the part that tells us that nothing we do will ever be good enough ? that we should try again.” — Julia Cameron

“Perfect lets you stall, ask more questions, do more reviews, dumb it down, safe it up and generally avoid doing anything that might fail (or anything important)” says Seth Godin. That urge to redo, revise, and re-edit your work until you get everything just right is what you should avoid. Second-guessing yourself and doubting by looking for the faults in your work will only make stalling worse. Perfectionism can prevent you from finishing your most important and meaningful work.

Brené Brown, author of “The Gifts of Imperfection: Let Go of Who You Think You’re Supposed to Be and Embrace Who You Are” explains:

“Understanding the difference between healthy striving and perfectionism is critical to laying down the shield and picking up your life. Research shows that perfectionism hampers success. In fact, it’s often the path to depression, anxiety, addiction, and life paralysis.

Healthy striving is self-focused: How can I improve? Perfectionism is other-focused: What will they think? Perfectionism is a hustle.”

When do you stop working on something (because it’s good enough)? That is an important question you will face a lot of times on your creative journey. Great creative professionals are practical and know when their work is excellent and most importantly they know when to stop the unachievable pursuit of perfection. You’ve only got a finite amount of time and resources to invest in anything. It pays to allocate your limited time and resources on getting real work done.

Choose to be your authentic self

Once you accept the fact that you’re not perfect, then you develop some confidence. — Rosalynn Carter

Replace perfect with contentment. Perfection stops you from launching, shipping, releasing, hitting send or publishing your creative work because of a fear of failure. You fear your work is not good enough. You are afraid no one will buy it, use it, share it or recommend it.

Give yourself permission to put your work out there without holding back. Once you stop trying to be perfect, you will be surprised at how much work you can actually get done. You will be a lot more productive and content with yourself. You will happier and more relaxed. Your approach to creative work will be different.

No one is perfect. It’s about time you cut yourself some slack and focus on progress instead of perfection. Just be your best you. That’s all the world requires of you. You will make mistakes but that should not stop you from showing us your most authentic self.

Make adjustments along the way as you create. Instead of striving for a perfect end, you should aim for incremental improvements. It’s a much better goal. Stop questioning yourself and get your best work out there.

True creative geniuses are always honing their crafts, looking to learn more, improve new releases or give a better performance. When you work towards continued improvement, you set yourself up for greatness. The key is not to make perfection your goal at the outset. This frees you to focus on getting something truly amazing done.

If you intent to creating something remarkable, learn to embrace who you are, celebrate your strengths and don’t let your weaknesses overshadow your best work. Inappropriate attention to detail is the reason why you have not launched your work. By all means, get it right but don’t aim for perfection.

I originally shared this post at Inc.com

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