I have a confession to make. I’m not perfect. I never really thought I was, but sometimes (or a lot), I struggle with perfectionist tendencies. And then sometimes, I have a mini breakdown when I realize I can’t (or don’t) meet my own high expectations for myself.
A recent example made this abundantly clear to me. I’m pursuing a master’s degree, part-time, while I continue to work full-time. Sometimes it seems like I’m on the 40-year track, rather than the 4-year track to completion--it feels like I’ve been in class forever. The truth is that I only take classes part-time, never during the summer (when the classes are condensed to five-week sessions) and there have been semesters where I’ve had to drop a class or withdraw simply because I couldn’t manage the pressures and commitment to class (which run in 8-week installments) along with the pressures and commitment to work. And for some reason, work always comes first.
Lately I’ve been fueled with a recommitment to my program—the end is on the horizon and I’m determined to finish sooner rather than later (which means no more sacrificing school for work). This past month I’ve been faced with dueling priorities—an annual work event that I manage the majority of planning for, and the end of my fourth-to-last-class (and one that I had avoided taking for as long as I could!). I did great in the class until the last two weeks, which coincided with my large work event.
2 comments:
This is one area where my husband has really helped me to ease up on my expectations. And it's a good thing, too...because I'm definitely not the perfect mom or wife! For as long as I've known him, he's reminded me that "decreased expectations leads to increased happiness".
(And remember...once you have the degree, no one will ever again know what your grades were... :)
Decreasing those expectations is just so darn hard!
And you're totally right--no one else cares, at all, about the GPA. And really, my life would be so much less stressful if the grades were simply pass/fail. :)
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