The comparison Trap
Shagmati’s son has scored 83% in his twelfth board exams. And just look at you.
That’s the parent highlight reel. Loud and clear.
But let’s pause—why does nobody mention that your child won the district-level badminton championship? Or started a small YouTube channel teaching guitar?
Because grades are important, but somehow, unique is invisible.
In many families, it doesn’t stop there.
Two daughters-in-law.
Same house.
One’s parenting is “modern and open-minded,”
The other is “overprotective.”
Jewelry is compared. So are meal timings, kid’s tuitions, and even the “correct way to fold a bedsheet.”
Welcome to the Olympics of Comparison—no medals, just exhaustion.
Why Do We Compare? A Brainy Explanation
Our evolutionary brain once used comparison as a survival mechanism.
"Cave A has more berries than Cave B? Move!"
But today?
"Ritu’s daughter speaks fluent French at 7."
"Your son is still learning English tenses."
Is this really survival... or social media-induced suffering?
What It Does to Us (Scientifically Speaking)
Emotionally: Triggers dissatisfaction, low self-worth, and FOMO (Fear Of Missing Out).
Physically: Overthinking → increased cortisol → digestive issues, fatigue, even insomnia.
Spiritually: A disconnect from the Self. You live from ego, not essence. Constantly chasing someone else's life.
According to researchers in Positive Psychology, frequent comparison can weaken self-identity and increase ego-based living—focusing on what you look like, not who you are (Kristin Neff, 2011).
Spiritual disconnection is often experienced as existential dissatisfaction, a persistent sense that “something is missing”—even when nothing is.
As someone once said:
"Be yourself—everyone else is already taken." — Oscar Wilde
And yet, here we are, applying filters—on photos and personalities.
"If we all threw our problems in a pile and saw everyone else's, we'd grab ours back in 5 seconds." 😄
What can we do ?
1. Self-Inquiry: Ask—“Whose timeline am I following?”
2. Journaling Prompt: “What makes me feel alive?”
3. Digital Detox: Limit content that glorifies perfection.
4. Celebrate Little Wins: Did your child show kindness today? That's bigger than a 98%.
5. Compassion Training: Remind yourself—Everyone’s fighting a battle you can’t see.
6. Replace Comparison with Curiosity: Instead of “Why not me?”, ask “How can I grow in my way?”
We say every child is unique. But do we raise them that way?If we keep comparing mangoes to coconuts, we’ll forget the joy of fruit salad. 🥭🥥
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