Adapted from Dr. Judith Orloff’s NY Times bestseller “Emotional Freedom: Liberate Yourself From Negative Emotions and Transform Your Life” (Three Rivers Press, 2011)
As a psychiatrist, I realize that comparing is a natural tendency we all have. It can be absolutely neutral, as when you merely evaluate similarities and differences. Such comparison is essential for astute reasoning. It’s also productive if you’re inspired to emulate another’s impressive traits. However, it becomes dysfunctional when it stirs envy and jealousy, if you judge yourself as better as or less than others. Think about it: without comparisons jealousy and envy couldn’t exist. Interestingly, it’s more common to feel inferior to those with “more” than to feel grateful compared to those with “less.”
We’re a society of comparison junkies. It starts from day one. Babies are compared to each other. Who’s smarter, cuter, more precocious? Then comes grammar school. I remember a hideous game some of my king-of-the-hill classmates would play. They’d pick a target, usually the shy, insecure student. Then, in a taunting tone they’d sing in unison, “There’s a fungus among us. Her name is (fill in the blank) fungus” until the poor kid, totally humiliated, slunk away. So, at school, there were basically the funguses and the non-funguses. Not so different from the breakdown of our comparisons in later life, interpersonally and politically. Shiites and Sunnis. White Supremacists versus Jews and Blacks. Protestants and Catholics in Belfast. Comparing yourself to others can preclude a bond of common fellowship and is a disservice to finding true worth. Either you’ll end up with the short end of the stick, or, if you deign to put yourself above anyone, you’re nowhere. (No one is above anyone else.) Self-esteem must come from simply being you.
In my book “Emotional Freedom,” I emphasize that comparing ourselves to others can come from low self-esteem and lack of belief in the integrity of our own unique life path. In a spiritual sense, comparing your path to another’s is comparing apples and oranges. Why? Your life is explicitly designed for your own growth. Every person you meet, every situation you encounter challenges you to become a stronger, more loving, and confident person. Try to appreciate the grace of both the hurdles and the joys you’ve been given. This is life’s legacy to you. Self-esteem comes from embracing this, working with what each day brings. How you spend your time here is up to you. Why squander it by comparing? Realistically, you’ll probably still do it. We all will. Even so, let’s strive to keep our eyes on ourselves to build self-esteem so we can become more emotionally free.
The following exercise will help you to turn jealousy and envy around. The more you practice it, the easier it will get.
Stop Comparing, Build Self-Esteem
Enlisting these methods helps you take your eyes off of other people and back to yourself. The point is to appreciate what you have rather than focus on what you’re lacking. A big part of emotional freedom is developing self-compassion rather than beating yourself up. Praise yourself. Gain self-esteem from your efforts to deal with jealousy or envy positively. Showing humility and avoiding comparisons let you build self-esteem. It fosters a loving versus defensive posture in relationships.
Click on link to read the Italian version of How to Stop Comparing Yourself with Others.
Comments (22)
Judith Orloff M.D. is a psychiatrist and author of Emotional Freedom: Liberate Yourself From Negative Emotions and Transform Your Life. Her other bestsellers are Positive Energy, Second Sight, and Guide to Intuitive Healing. Dr. Orloff combines traditional medicine with intuition, spirituality, and energy medicine. More information at www.drjudithorloff.com.

Comments
of mine from high school shared which till today stays etched in my mind: "All men (women included) are fools; always wanting what is not. When it is hot, they want it cold. When it is cold, they want it hot. Always wanting what is not!"
i felt that i was putting my voice in the room and that i wasn't invisible. However, there are times when it's important for a person to move out of a situation where they are made to feel less than or if they can't, then at least to give thenselves credit
for the postive qualities that they do bring.I know that I will never be as quick as my colleaugue in formulating ideas but I also know that what I have to offer in terms of emotional sensitivity is greater than what she can offer,despite it not really being
appreciated in my setting. I often tell myself that we're all different with our unique strengths and areas that need improvement and this helps me to not think of them or myself as better or lesser than.,We need all kinds of talents to make up the world,
to make whole of the parts.It's also so important to learn self-compassion for our foibles and vulnerabilities.
this.
I do try the approach of working with adversity, and not walking away from it. It's really in my face though on a daily basis. I love the comment about "what I have to offer in emotional sensitivity not being appriciated in the setting."
with a bit of originality!
for to keep it sensible. I cant wait to read much more from you. This is actually a tremendous website.
- apparently she admires me and wants to emulate me. But it feels more like she is trying to be me, like she is trying to take my identity and make it her own, to be me even better than me. I do a lot of work with the triggers being around her brings up, and
I feel so angry and uncomfortable around her. I've wondered if this is some kind of psychic vampirism?