Why Do I Feel 'I Will Never Be Good Enough'?

2026-04-06 00:57:22 44
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3 Answers

Delilah
Delilah
2026-04-10 11:39:39
It hits me sometimes, too—that gnawing feeling like I’ll always be chasing some invisible standard. Maybe it’s because we’re constantly bombarded with curated perfection: social media feeds full of people’s highlight reels, characters in 'Succession' or 'The Bear' who make ruthless ambition look glamorous, or even the way games like 'Dark Souls' frame struggle as something you’re supposed to conquer flawlessly. But real life isn’t scripted or designed for a satisfying arc. I’ve started keeping a list of tiny wins—like finishing a book ('Klara and the Sun' wrecked me in the best way) or cooking a meal without burning it. It sounds silly, but it helps.

What’s wild is how media often mirrors this. Think of Mob from 'Mob Psycho 100'—a kid drowning in self-doubt despite having literal world-shaking power. Or the indie game 'Celeste,' where the mountain isn’t just a physical climb but a metaphor for battling that voice saying 'you can’t.' Maybe the takeaway isn’t to suddenly feel 'enough,' but to notice when you’re comparing your behind-the-scenes to someone else’s highlight reel. I still forget that sometimes, though.
Hannah
Hannah
2026-04-10 21:54:55
Ugh, that feeling is like the worst kind of cliffhanger—the kind where you’re stuck waiting for your own character development. I get it especially with hobbies; like when my pottery looks more like abstract horror than mugs, or when I watch 'Blue Period' and Yatora’s art progress puts my doodles to shame. But last week, I rewatched 'Parks and Rec' and realized Leslie Knope fails constantly—her newsletters are disasters, her rallies flop, but she just… keeps loving what she does. It’s not about being the best, but about being stubbornly yourself.

Now I’m trying to apply that to my half-finished novel draft. It’s messy, but so was the first season of 'The Wire.' Maybe 'good enough' starts with showing up, even when it feels like you’re writing filler episodes.
Jace
Jace
2026-04-12 01:47:46
That thought creeps up on me most when I’m deep in a creative rut—like when I’m trying to write and everything feels derivative, or when I binge-play 'Hades' and can’t escape past level 3. There’s a weird paradox where consuming great art (say, the layered storytelling in 'Severance' or the gut-punch endings of 'NieR: Automata') fuels both inspiration and insecurity. It’s like, 'How could I ever create something that resonant?' But then I remember an interview where Ed Brubaker said even he thinks his 'Criminal' comics are trash halfway through drafting.

Maybe 'good enough' isn’t a fixed point. My teenage niece once told me her favorite 'Demon Slayer' episodes were the ones where Tanjiro straight-up fails and keeps going. Not the flashy fights—the moments where he’s covered in mud but still swinging. I’ve been trying to reframe my own slip-ups that way lately: not as proof of inadequacy, but as part of the damn process.
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