On perfection pressure, and learning when to stop
At a work meeting recently, someone brought up the idea of “good enough.”
Not perfect. Not flawless. Not endlessly revised until every possible improvement had been squeezed out of it. Just good enough.
People nodded along.
I remember sitting there, surprised by how easily everyone seemed to accept that. Good enough? As in… we’re all just okay with stopping there? We’re comfortable handing something over before it has been polished within an inch of its life?
I heard it, reacted internally, and then moved on. Or at least I thought I did.
Later that same day, I was typing up the meeting minutes when I came across that part of the conversation again. There it was, sitting in the notes, waiting for me a second time.
Good enough.
And this time, it landed differently.
Because while I was typing minutes about the value of not chasing perfection, I was also weeks-deep in the middle of perfecting my Hallmark archives.
Of course I was.
I had been adjusting pages, changing formats, adding details, rethinking layouts, fixing tiny inconsistencies, and making sure everything looked exactly right. What started as a fun personal project had turned into a full internal production. A system. A structure. A thing with rules and standards and a moving finish line.
And suddenly, the irony became impossible to miss.
I was perfecting the notes about not needing to be perfect.
That feels about right for me.
At work, precision is part of what I do. I proofread and edit minutes, documents, and shared materials. I look for errors. I check formatting. I make sure bullets line up, fonts match, spacing is consistent, and margins behave. If several people have worked on the same document, I’m often the one tying it all together at the end.
Different font sizes? I’ll notice.
A heading that doesn’t match the others? I’ll notice.
One section using one kind of dash and another section using a different one? I’ll notice.
Sometimes a word after a colon is capitalized and sometimes it isn’t? I’ll notice that too, and then I’ll probably comb through the whole document to make it uniform.
There is value in that. I know there is.
Clean documents matter. Consistency matters. Professionalism matters. A document that looks organized and polished reflects well on the people behind it, even when no one can name exactly why it feels better. The details create trust. They make things easier to read. They show care.
So the question is not whether attention to detail is bad.
It isn’t.
The question is when care turns into compulsion.
When does precision stop being useful and start becoming a trap? That is where I struggle.
Because this does not stay at work.
It follows me home.
It shows up in my blog templates, which never seem to last more than a month or two before I’m tweaking them again. It shows up in my archives, my tracking systems, my reading logs, my lists, my layouts, my categories, my tiny invisible rules for things only I will ever see.
It especially shows up in my writing. I edit essays long after the important work is done. I rearrange paragraphs, rewrite sentences, change titles, add lines, delete them, and then add them back again. Sometimes I spend more time refining a piece than I spent writing it in the first place.
Even when no one else is looking, even when it's just for me... I care.
Sometimes I care so much that it starts to feel panicky.
A spacing issue bothers me. A format that doesn’t match bothers me. A system that almost works but not quite bothers me. Something unfinished or inconsistent sits in the back of my mind like a blinking cursor.
Fix it.
Adjust it.
Make it match.
Make it better.
Make it right.
And the frustrating part is that, for the most part, I enjoy this kind of thing.
I like tracking. I like organizing. I like creating systems. I like the satisfaction of making something clean and useful and visually pleasing. There is a little spark of joy in seeing everything line up the way I imagined it.
It is not all misery. That’s what makes it complicated.
It is both a strength and a burden.
The same part of me that can take a messy document and make it coherent is the part of me that can lose an entire week to a personal archive. The same part of me that takes pride in careful work is the part of me that can turn a hobby into homework. The same part of me that notices details others miss is the part of me that cannot always stop noticing them.
And once I am committed to a project, I can burn myself out on it.
It usually starts with excitement.
I have an idea. I build something. I make it pretty. I make it useful. I feel that first rush of satisfaction.
Then I see a way to improve it.
Then another.
Then another.
Soon I’m no longer enjoying the project as much as maintaining it. Refining it. Correcting it. Expanding it. The finish line keeps moving farther away, and somehow I’m the one moving it.
Nothing is ever really done. It is only the current version.
That is exhausting to admit.
Because there is pride in being particular. There is pride in doing careful work. There is pride in being the person who notices, who fixes, who brings order to the mess. I don’t want to lose that part of myself. I don’t want to become careless. I don’t want to shrug at things that matter.
But I also don’t want to keep treating every detail like it carries the weight of my entire identity. I don’t want every project to become a test I can never finish passing.
Maybe that is why “good enough” bothered me so much at first.
It sounded like settling. It sounded like lowering the bar. It sounded like people giving themselves permission to stop before the thing was as good as it could possibly be.
But maybe that is not what good enough means.
Maybe good enough means knowing the difference between what matters and what only feels urgent because my brain has latched onto it.
Maybe it means recognizing that not every task deserves my full emotional investment.
Maybe it means asking whether the extra hour will actually improve the work, or whether it will only quiet my anxiety for a few minutes.
Maybe good enough is not the opposite of caring.
Maybe it is the boundary that keeps caring from consuming everything.
I am not there yet.
I still want the bullets lined up. I still want the fonts to match. I still want the archive to make sense. I still want the systems to feel complete, even when I know complete is a slippery little liar.
But I am starting to understand that perfection does not always give me peace.
Sometimes it gives me another thing to maintain.
Sometimes it turns joy into obligation.
Sometimes it convinces me that if I just fix one more thing, I will finally feel finished.
And then I don’t.
So maybe the question is not whether something is perfect.
Maybe the question is whether perfect is worth what it costs.
Because sometimes the work is already good. Sometimes the document is clear. Sometimes the archive is useful. Sometimes the project has done what it was supposed to do.
Maybe the question is not whether I can keep making it better. I almost always can. Maybe the question is what it costs me to keep trying.
I do not want to stop noticing. I do not want to stop caring.
I just want to believe that good enough can still be good.