How to Stop Comparing Yourself to Others (And Start Running Your Own Race)
Feb 20, 2026
You’re Winning by Someone Else’s Score
You open LinkedIn on a Tuesday morning and there it is. Someone you went to college with just made VP at a company you’ve heard of. She’s three years younger than you.
Your stomach drops.
You scroll past it, but the damage is done. Now you’re doing me
ntal math. Where should you be by now? What did she do differently? You close the app and try to focus, but the question lingers: am I behind?
This isn’t a new feeling. You’ve had it browsing Instagram, catching up with old friends, even sitting in a meeting with colleagues who seem to have it all figured out. And the worst part? You know comparing yourself to others is pointless. You’ve read the quotes. “Comparison is the thief of joy.” Great. Knowing that hasn’t stopped a thing.
The reason it hasn’t stopped is because you’re treating comparison like a bad habit. It isn’t. It’s a signal. And the signal is telling you something important about how you’re measuring your life.
Why “Just Stop Comparing” Is Useless Advice
Here’s what nobody tells you about the comparison trap: you can’t willpower your way out of it.
Social comparison isn’t a character flaw. It’s hardwired. In 1954, psychologist Leon Festinger published his theory of social comparison processes and demonstrated that humans have a fundamental, automatic drive to evaluate themselves by looking at others. [1] We don’t do it because we’re weak. We do it because our brains are built that way.
So you’ve tried the standard advice. Gratitude journals. Digital detoxes. Repeating affirmations in the mirror. Maybe they helped for a week. Then you opened your phone, saw someone’s highlight reel, and the whole cycle started again.
That’s not a failure of discipline. That’s the wrong solution applied to the wrong problem.
The problem was never that you compare. Everyone compares. The problem is what you’re comparing against.
You’re Not Behind. You’re on a Different Timeline.
Here’s the reframe that changes everything: you feel behind because you’re running a race you never signed up for.
Think about this. For most of human history, your comparison set was small. Your village. Your extended family. Maybe a few dozen colleagues. Anthropologist Robin Dunbar estimated the natural human social group at roughly 150 people. That’s who your brain evolved to compare against.
Now open any social media app. In ten minutes of scrolling, you’re exposed to hundreds of people’s best moments, curated achievements, and polished milestones. Your comparison set went from 150 to infinite. And research confirms this matters. Studies on peer group size show that larger reference groups prompt more extreme self-evaluation and more polarized emotional responses. [2] Worse, it’s a cycle that feeds itself. Research from 2024 found that upward social comparisons on platforms like Instagram create a vicious loop: comparing makes you feel worse, feeling worse makes you compare more. [3]
You’re not behind. You’re measuring yourself against an impossible, infinite scoreboard that didn’t exist 20 years ago. The race has no finish line because there’s always someone ahead.
The solution isn’t to run faster. It’s to stop running someone else’s race and build your own scoreboard.
Three Shifts That Actually Break the Comparison Cycle
If you can’t eliminate comparison (you can’t, it’s biological), the move is to redirect it. Here are three shifts that work because they address the root cause, not the symptom.
Shift 1: Define Your Own Scoreboard
Most people have never sat down and written what success actually means to them. Not the default script. Not the version their parents handed them or the one LinkedIn rewards with likes. Their version.
This is why comparison hurts so much. Without your own criteria, you default to everyone else’s. Psychologists Edward Deci and Richard Ryan spent decades studying this through self-determination theory. Their conclusion: when people pursue goals they’ve chosen autonomously, they experience greater motivation and wellbeing. When they chase goals imposed by external pressure or social comparison, both motivation and mental health decline. [4]
Try this: write your “Enough List.” Five categories – career, relationships, health, finances, purpose. For each one, answer: what would be genuinely enough? Not impressive. Not Instagram-worthy. Enough for you.
Here’s the counterintuitive part. When people actually do this exercise, they often discover they’re closer to “enough” than they thought. The gap wasn’t between where they are and where they should be. It was between where they are and where someone else is. Remove the someone else, and the gap shrinks dramatically.
When you have internal metrics, external ones lose their grip.
Shift 2: Compare Against Yesterday, Not Others
The only fair comparison is you versus you twelve months ago. Not you versus a stranger on the internet who has different advantages, different timing, and a completely different starting point.
This sounds obvious. But almost nobody actually tracks it. We’re obsessed with relative position (where am I compared to others?) and almost never measure personal velocity (how far have I come?).
Here’s a test. Can you name three specific ways you’ve grown in the last year? Most people can’t. Not because they haven’t grown, but because they’ve never paused to notice. They were too busy measuring against someone else’s yardstick.
Start keeping a simple log. Once a month, write three things you can do now that you couldn’t do a year ago. Three problems you’ve solved. Three ways you’ve grown. It doesn’t need to be dramatic. “I can have a difficult conversation without spiraling.” “I finally set a boundary with my boss.” “I started running again.” Small evidence of real progress.
Growth rate matters more than current position. A person growing 20% a year from a modest starting point will outperform someone stagnating at a higher baseline. And when you measure growth, you stop fixating on someone else’s snapshot.
Shift 3: Curate Your Inputs
You can’t control the instinct to compare, but you can control what you compare against.
This is not about a “digital detox” that lasts three days. It’s about deliberately designing your information environment. A 2025 study of over 500 participants found that upward comparisons on social media directly mediated lower self-esteem, and that reducing exposure to idealized content was protective. [5] And this applies even to passive scrolling. Research shows that just watching content (not engaging with it) still triggers comparison and affects mood. [6]
So be ruthless. Unfollow accounts that make you feel behind. Replace them with people doing what you actually want to do, not what looks impressive to strangers. Strategic unfollows aren’t weakness. They’re design.
What This Looks Like on a Monday Morning
Meet Priya. She’s 37, a marketing director, and until six months ago she started every morning the same way: open LinkedIn, scroll, feel behind. Someone got promoted. Someone launched a startup. Someone younger was doing more.
By 9am, before she’d done a single thing, she already felt like she was losing.
Then she tried the Enough List. Career: creative autonomy and a team she enjoys. Relationships: dinner with her kids four nights a week. Health: three runs a week. Finances: mortgage covered with enough left to travel twice a year. Purpose: building something she’s proud of.
Here’s what surprised her. She didn’t actually want to be a VP. She’d been chasing that goal because it was the default scoreboard. What she wanted was creative autonomy and time with her kids. She already had most of it.
She unfollowed the corporate ladder content. Started following creative directors and people who’d built flexible careers. The comparison didn’t vanish. But it shifted from “I’m behind” to “that’s interesting, I want to try that.” From self-destruction to inspiration.
Or take Marco, a 42-year-old engineer who felt stuck because three of his former classmates had founded companies. He wrote his Enough List and realized his version of success was mastery, not ownership. He wanted to go deep on hard problems, not manage people. Once he had his own scoreboard, their achievements stopped feeling like his failures.
The pattern we’ve seen across hundreds of professionals is remarkably consistent: the moment someone defines their own version of enough, the comparison reflex doesn’t disappear, but it loses its teeth. It goes from a gut punch to background noise. Not because they became enlightened. Because they finally had something real to measure against.
“But What If I’m Actually Falling Behind?”
Fair question. Let’s address it directly.
“Some comparison is healthy. It motivates me.” Maybe. But there’s a sharp difference between inspiration and self-destruction. Inspiration sounds like: “They did it, so it’s possible for me too.” Comparison sounds like: “They did it, so I’ve failed.” One energizes you. The other drains you. If your comparison habit leaves you feeling motivated, keep it. If it leaves you feeling hollow at 2am, that’s not motivation. That’s anxiety wearing a productivity mask.
“I can’t just ignore reality.” You’re not ignoring reality. You’re choosing which reality to measure against. Someone else’s curated highlight reel is not your reality. Your reality is your starting point, your constraints, your values, and your progress. Compare against that.
Here’s the fear underneath both objections: if I stop comparing, I’ll lose my edge. I’ll get complacent. But the edge comparison gives you isn’t excellence. It’s chronic dissatisfaction. And chronic dissatisfaction isn’t a strategy. It’s a slow drain.
The people who actually perform at the highest level aren’t fueled by comparison. They’re fueled by curiosity, mastery, and a clear picture of what they’re building. That’s the edge worth cultivating.
Your One Move This Week
Write your Enough List. Ten minutes. Five categories: career, relationships, health, finances, purpose. For each one, write what would be genuinely enough.
Not impressive enough. Not enough to post about. Just… enough for you.
Then, the next time you catch yourself comparing, check it against your list. Not theirs. Yours.
The race you’ve been running was never yours to begin with. You didn’t choose the scoreboard, the competitors, or the finish line. Someone else drew the track, and you started running without asking where it led.
You get to build your own. And you might find you’re further along than you thought. Reference [1] ^ [Human Relations]: A Theory of Social Comparison Processes [2] ^ [Frontiers in Psychology]: The Influence of Social Comparison and Peer Group Size on Risky Decision-Making [3] ^ [Personality and Individual Differences]: Depressive symptoms and upward social comparisons during Instagram use: A vicious circle [4] ^ [American Psychologist]: Self-Determination Theory and the Facilitation of Intrinsic Motivation, Social Development, and Well-Being [5] ^ [Frontiers in Psychology]: The associations between social comparison on social media and young adults’ mental health [6] ^ [Procedia Computer Science]: The Insta-Comparison Game: The Relationship between Social Media Use, Social Comparison, and Depression The post How to Stop Comparing Yourself to Others (And Start Running Your Own Race) appeared first on LifeHack.
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