Lesson 1
Your Standards Are Not The Problem
This opening lesson introduces the key distinction at the heart of the course: high personal standards are not the same as harmful perfectionism. Drawing on research into the difference between healthy striving and distressing discrepancy, the lesson explains why the gap between expectation and self-perceived achievement, rather than the standard itself, causes anxiety and a persistent sense of falling short. Listeners leave with a clearer understanding of their own pattern and the reassurance that this course is not asking them to want or achieve less.
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Lesson 2
Where Perfectionism Actually Comes From
This lesson explores where perfectionism actually comes from, reframing it as a learned adaptation rather than a fixed personality flaw. It explains the role of conditional approval in childhood, the personality link between emotional sensitivity and harmful perfectionism, and the influence of competitive comparison. Listeners leave with a kinder, more accurate understanding of their own history with the pattern, and the reassurance that what they have learned can also be gradually reshaped.
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Lesson 3
The Procrastination Trap
This lesson explains the well-documented link between perfectionism and procrastination, showing why the fear of an imperfect attempt so often becomes a reason not to start at all. It explores why avoidance feels protective, how working under last-minute pressure reinforces the avoidance cycle, and offers three practical tools for breaking it: shrinking the first step, adopting a rough draft mindset, and naming avoidance honestly when it is happening.
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Lesson 4
All Or Nothing: Recognising The Thinking Patterns
This lesson identifies the specific thinking patterns that drive perfectionism: all-or-nothing thinking, mental filtering, focusing on negatives over positives, the moving goalpost that never lets achievement feel sufficient, and fortune-telling about the consequences of imperfect results. Each pattern is explained with a relatable example, and listeners are given a practical question to ask themselves when they notice one of these patterns running.
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Lesson 5
The Inner Critic Of The Perfectionist
This lesson explores the particular character of the perfectionist's inner critic, a voice that sounds reasonable and protective rather than obviously harsh, which is exactly what makes it difficult to challenge. It explains why the voice often functions as an old, outdated safety strategy rather than genuine quality control, and offers three practical tools: separating the voice from the self, testing whether its criticism is specific and useful, and deliberately borrowing the voice of a fair, knowledgeable mentor instead.
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Lesson 6
What Good Enough Actually Means
This lesson teaches a practical method for defining what "good enough" actually means for a specific task, replacing perfectionism's single, maximum-everywhere standard with one deliberately matched to the task's requirements. It introduces the idea of diminishing returns, the point at which further effort stops meaningfully improving a result, and offers three questions listeners can use before starting any task to set its standard intentionally rather than by automatic default.
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Lesson 7
Finishing Imperfectly
This lesson addresses the specific difficulty of finishing and releasing work once it has met a deliberately set standard, exploring why continued tinkering often delays exposure to judgement rather than achieving genuine improvement. It offers three practical tools: testing whether a further change would be noticed externally, setting the finishing point in advance, and building in a deliberate pause between finishing and releasing. Listeners leave better equipped to recognise when something is ready, even when it does not yet feel ready.
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Lesson 8
Perfectionism And Self-Worth
This lesson explores how perfectionism becomes entangled with self-worth, distinguishing conditional self-esteem, which rises and falls with performance, from a more stable sense of worth rooted in values and relationships rather than in results. It offers three practical steps for separating achievement from identity: noticing when a result has quietly become a verdict on self-worth, deliberately building other sources of worth, and using language that keeps disappointment specific rather than letting it broaden into a broader identity statement.
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Lesson 9
Self-Compassion For The Recovering Perfectionist
This lesson introduces self-compassion, specifically adapted for perfectionism, and explains why it supports motivation and resilience more reliably than harsh self-criticism. It breaks self-compassion into three practical components, self-kindness, common humanity, and mindful awareness, and walks through a worked example showing how they combine into a genuine, usable response to a real setback. Listeners leave with a repeatable phrase they can keep at the ready for the moments when their own inner critic is loudest.
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Lesson 10
Holding High Standards Without The Suffering
The final lesson of the course brings everything together, returning to the central idea that standards were never the problem. It explains that perfectionism rarely disappears completely, but that noticing the pattern and having choice within it changes with practice. Listeners are encouraged to build one or two tools deeply into regular practice rather than attempting everything at once, and the lesson closes by addressing the fear that letting go of perfectionism means letting go of ambition, before ending with a warm, final reflection.
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