Obsessing Over Goals Is the Opposite of Self-Improvement

Three ways to avoid a classic personal growth trap

Lincoln Hill, PhD
Forge

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A hand holds up a bunch of gold, silver, and bronze medals against a bright blue sky.
Photo: PeskyMonkey/iStock/Getty Images Plus

I’I’m a PhD candidate in counseling psychology, studying how context influences mental health outcomes and how this makes us vulnerable to phenomena like impostor syndrome. I’m also a clinician who counsels high-achieving and goal-oriented people working toward mental wellness and self-compassion. What seems clear when I talk to people about their goals is that the goals become the point.

They’re taking their cues from media culture: those “motivational” products with sayings like “You have the same 24 hours as Beyoncé”; Steve Harvey’s viral comment on equating little sleep with success; Michael Bloomberg’s highly questionable professional advice that involves “out-working” everyone else. The uniting idea is that denying ourselves rest, nutrition, and relationships is perfectly acceptable if it results in progress toward the goal.

This obsession with goals feeds our “Who’s busiest?” brag-offs with our friends over brunch and makes us feel guilty about setting away messages for time off. When we focus so much on the goal, we leave little room to engage with the motivations underlying it. By concentrating so intently on what’s next, we distance ourselves from the reason we started the journey in the first place. We’re…

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