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“It’s because they trained us to think only an A or a B was acceptable,” said Doreen, my brilliant mastermind friend (and editor).

And right she was.

How often have you heard variations of “progress not perfection” recently? Perfection is the big enemy, the distractor, the lame excuse to procrastinate, stall, and not perform. Online, you’ll hear this most often about publishing content, which makes people understandably scared.

But what about any project? Even ones that no one sees?

“20% is better than 0%”, Doreen said.

It should be logically obvious that any progress is better than none. If I want to declutter my closet, or reorganize my office, I’m better off doing just one drawer today, one shelf tomorrow, until I actually finish, than doing nothing at all. Right?

And yet, it doesn’t feel right.

  1. 20% or even 50% is an F. That’s difficult to appreciate if you don’t consciously choose to celebrate small wins.
    Seeing results from small steps requires consistency, so they add up to real and exciting progress.
  2. With all the progress that I’ve made, it’s hard for me not to have a knee-jerk inner critic eye-roll and “meh” response.

When I think of how much unhappiness this arbitrary standard has caused me, and how it affects almost all my friends, and worse, my kids (!) it makes me wonder how anyone ever makes any progress at all. For a second, I even considered homeschooling my kids. #not

What does help is tracking daily progress, either in any sort of calendar or table, like Seinfeld’s productivity chain, in a bullet journal, in an objectives-oriented planner (I use the Full Focus Planner**), or a habit dashboard/minimalist journal.

And the celebrations?
That’s a whole other topic…

**Let me know if you’re interested in a FFP. You can get $10 off if I refer you, and so will I!

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