Youโve just finished editing a video or writing a post youโre proud of. Then, like clockwork, you scroll through your feed and see someone elseโs work that looks cleaner, sharper, moreโฆ everything. Suddenly, your proud moment feels small.
Thatโs the comparison trap.
The strange thing is, it works both ways:
- When creating, we compare our behind-the-scenes mess to someone elseโs finished masterpiece.
- When consuming, we compare our daily life to someone elseโs carefully curated highlight reel.
And we forget that what we see online is rarely the whole truth.
Why the Trap Works So Well
Comparison is ancient. Itโs how weโve measured progress, safety, and social standing for thousands of years. But the internet supercharges it. Instead of comparing ourselves to a handful of neighbors, weโre now comparing ourselves to millions โ many of whom are presenting a polished, filtered version of themselves.
Itโs like walking into a stadium of the worldโs best at everything you doโฆ every day.
For Creators: The Illusion of โBetterโ
When you watch someone elseโs finished video, photo, or article, youโre seeing hours of planning, retakes, and edits compressed into a neat package. You donโt see the awkward moments, the failed shots, or the days they didnโt feel like working.
Itโs like comparing your rehearsal to someoneโs movie premiere.
For Consumers: The Illusion of โPerfect Livesโ
Even if youโre not a creator, itโs easy to fall into the trap. Scroll long enough, and youโll start to believe that everyone else is constantly achieving, traveling, or looking great without effort. Itโs a recipe for quiet dissatisfaction โ because youโre comparing your normal to someone elseโs best moments.
Climbing Out of the Trap
Hereโs whatโs helped me and many others:
- Measure against yourself โ Did you improve since your last attempt? Thatโs the only scoreboard that matters.
- Follow process-sharers โ Seek out creators who show their messy middle, not just the end result.
- Create before you consume โ Start your day by making something, no matter how small, before you look at what others are doing.
- Remember the hidden timeline โ The โovernight successโ you see might be the result of 500 unseen attempts.
The Only Comparison Worth Making
Thereโs one type of comparison thatโs actually healthy โ and I often forget it myself: comparing todayโs work with my own previous work.
Itโs the only comparison where the โopponentโ shares your exact circumstances, your unique voice, and your personal pace of progress.
And itโs the kind of comparison that fuels improvement without creating discouragement. You can clearly see how far youโve come โ and how far you can still go โ without chasing someone elseโs unknown journey.
The internet can be a tool for connection, inspiration, and learning โ but only if we remember this:
Youโre not falling behind. Youโre on your path, at your pace.
And your raw, imperfect, work-in-progress self? Thatโs the real content worth sharing.








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