"Comparison is the thief of joy." This proverb is as true today as it ever was. And nowhere is it more evident than at reunions.
Whether it's your high school reunion, college reunion, or even a work reunion, it's easy to get caught up in comparing yourself to others. You see what they've accomplished in their lives, and you start to wonder if you're measuring up.
This is especially true in an environment like Harvard, where I had the privilege this past weekend of attending my 20th(!) reunion. Harvard is a place where people are driven to succeed. They're the best of the best, and they're constantly striving to be better.
This can lead to a lot of pressure to perform. You feel like you must prove yourself to your classmates, your professors, and even yourself.
But the truth is, you don't need to prove anything to anyone. You are enough, not objectively, but more importantly in this context, subjectively, because you are the only you there is.
Maturity means no longer doing things to prove yourself to others. It means being content with your own life, regardless of what others are doing.
Of course, it's easy to say this, but it's harder to do. It takes a lot of self-awareness and self-acceptance. This is one area where the gap in knowledge and action can take decades to close.
But it's worth it. When you stop comparing yourself to others, you can finally start living your own life. You can focus on your own goals and your own happiness, as you define them, not as others do, or more likely you just think they do.
Social media can make this even more difficult. We're constantly bombarded with images of other people's “perfect” lives. It's easy to start to believe that our own lives are lacking.
But remember, social media is only a highlight reel. It doesn't show the mundane 99% of life. It's designed to make us feel inadequate.
So don't fall for it. Don't compare yourself to others. Just focus on living your own best life, because definitionally that is the life you are living. It is entirely your own, and as that singular life, it is definitionally the best there is right now (though of course you can shape it and change it with time, but that is a subject for another time).
Stoicism, Buddhism, and Taoism all offer similar advice on the what it takes to achieve happiness and contentment. They all teach that it is not about adding to what you have, but rather subtracting from what you want.
The most impactful subtraction of all? Wanting to prove yourself to your classmates from decades ago.
Let go of that need to prove yourself. It's holding you back from being present within and thus living your best life.
Focus on your own happiness, contentment, and fulfillment and don't worry about what others are doing. You are enough, just as you are.
Sitting at dinner the final night of the reunion, I was speaking with a friend’s wife. "I keep my sea foam Prius,” she told me, “because it embarrasses me. It proves I still have work to do."
We all have work to do. We're all on a journey of self-discovery and self-improvement.
Don't let anyone, and especially that voice inside your own head, tell you that you're not good enough.
You are enough.
You are you, the only you.
You have nothing to prove to anyone, including yourself.
That is true today, tomorrow, and at your next reunion, five years or fifty years from now.