In a culture that constantly pushes for excellence, 100% effort, and perfection, it is easy to view "good enough" as a failure. We often feel that if we aren't doing something perfectly, we shouldn't do it at all.
When you accept "good enough," you grant yourself permission to be a beginner. You allow yourself to make mistakes, learn, and iterate.
Being "good enough" isn't about having low standards; it is about having realistic standards. It allows you to show up for your life consistently rather than waiting on the sidelines until you are "ready" to be perfect. By embracing the imperfect, you actually get more done, and you enjoy the process of doing it. altyazılıpo
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Perfectionism is often a defense mechanism. We try to control outcomes so tightly that we end up paralyzed. This leads to procrastination (fear of starting), burnout (inability to stop), and anxiety (fear of judgment). A perfect project that isn't finished is worth nothing; a "good enough" project that is completed has value.
A helpful mental shift is to aim for 70% effort rather than 100%. In almost every area of life—work, hobbies, parenting, friendships—70% effort yields 95% of the results. That final 30% of "polish" usually takes a disproportionate amount of energy and time, often without adding significant value to the final outcome. You allow yourself to make mistakes, learn, and iterate
(which "altyazı" translates to in Turkish):
However, the concept of "good enough" is actually one of the most powerful tools for mental well-being and productivity.
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