Let go of comparison
Stop measuring your worth against others — comparison fits in by being the same and standing out at once.
Why it works
Comparison is a trap because it demands two contradictory things simultaneously: fit in and stand out, be like everyone yet better than them. That double bind makes self-worth impossible to secure, since someone is always ahead on some axis. Stepping out of comparison and onto your own values frees self-worth from a contest you can never permanently win.
How to do it
- Notice when a feeling of inadequacy is actually a comparison in disguise.
- Redirect from "how do I rank?" to "what do I actually value and want here?"
- Curate inputs (including feeds) that reliably trigger the comparison spiral.
Evidence
Brown’s framing of comparison is qualitative, and it lines up with the well-studied social-comparison literature linking upward comparison to lower mood and self-esteem in many studies, including work on social media use. (observational)
The social-comparison research is sizable but largely correlational; Brown’s specific guidepost is interview-derived.
Common mistake
Trying to win the comparison instead of leaving it — beating others on their terms still leaves your worth contingent on the ranking and the next competitor.
Practice this with IX Coach
IX Coach helps you spot when inadequacy is really a hidden comparison and redirect to your own values, and supports curating the inputs that fuel the spiral.
7 days free, then $40/month (~$1.30/day).