Psychologists say people with high levels of perfectionism often struggle more than they seem to when life throws a curveball

Published On: June 16, 2026 at 3:45 PM
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Thoughtful young adult sitting alone and looking stressed while reviewing notes, illustrating perfectionism, anxiety, and difficulty adapting to change.

What happens when “doing your best” turns into needing every step to go exactly as planned? For many people, perfectionism starts as a drive to work hard, stay organized, and avoid sloppy mistakes. But when it becomes rigid, it can make ordinary change feel like a threat.

Psychology research suggests the problem is not high standards by themselves. The trouble begins when mistakes feel personal, uncertainty feels unsafe, and changing direction feels like failure. That can lead to anxiety, procrastination, and a kind of mental paralysis just when flexibility matters most.

Why change feels harder

Perfectionism is often described as a mix of high personal standards, concern over mistakes, and doubt about whether one’s actions are good enough. In plain English, that means the person is not just trying to do well. They may also be scanning constantly for what could go wrong.

That mindset can be useful in a few situations, such as checking a medical form or reviewing an important work report. But life rarely behaves like a checklist. New bosses arrive, deadlines shift, families move, routines break, and suddenly the “perfect plan” does not fit the day anymore.

The flexibility gap

A recent study by Hung Nguyen and Eric M. J. Morris from La Trobe University looked at clinical perfectionism and psychological flexibility in 210 adults. Psychological flexibility means being able to notice uncomfortable thoughts and feelings without getting stuck in them, then still acting in ways that match your values.

The researchers found that higher clinical perfectionism was linked with more distress and lower well-being.

The study also pointed to rigid inaction, avoiding uncomfortable feelings, and taking perfectionistic thoughts too literally as part of the pattern. In practical terms, that can look like overthinking a small decision until nothing gets done.

When mistakes feel too costly

For a perfectionist, a simple change can carry extra weight. A new task at work is not just a new task. It may feel like a test of competence, identity, and reputation all at once.

That’s where the all-or-nothing trap comes in. If the result cannot be excellent, the brain may label it as a total failure. What should be a rough draft becomes a final verdict, and that is a tiring way to live.

Anxiety and delay

This pattern helps explain why perfectionism often goes hand in hand with procrastination.

A meta-analysis in Social Behavior and Personality found that perfectionist concerns were positively linked with procrastination, while perfectionistic strivings were negatively linked with it. In other words, fear-based perfectionism and goal-focused effort do not behave the same way.

Another study from the University of Kent found that worry was tied to procrastination and perfectionism, especially concern over mistakes and doubts about actions. That might sound familiar to anyone who has rewritten one email five times, then still felt unsure before hitting send.

Not all perfectionism is the same

Researchers often separate adaptive perfectionism from maladaptive perfectionism. Adaptive perfectionism can involve high standards, discipline, and pride in careful work. The person can still adjust, learn, and move on when something goes wrong.

Maladaptive perfectionism is different. It is driven more by fear, harsh self-criticism, and the sense that “good enough” is not acceptable.

A 2025 PLOS One study described perfectionism as multidimensional and noted that maladaptive forms have been linked with anxiety, distress, lower self-compassion, avoidant coping, and procrastination.

Why this matters even more nowadays

The pressure to be perfect is not only a private struggle. A 2026 release from the American Psychological Association reported research in Psychological Bulletin showing that self-reported perfectionism increased among college students between 1989 and 2024, based on 307 studies and more than 82,000 students in the United States, Canada, and Britain.

Thomas Curran of the London School of Economics and Political Science put it bluntly, saying, “Perfectionism is a public health risk.”

The same release noted that higher perfectionism remained associated with symptoms such as depression and anxiety over time. That does not mean perfectionism causes every problem, but experts warn it may add pressure to an already demanding world.

How to build more flexibility

The goal is not to stop caring. It is to loosen the grip. A useful first step is changing the inner script from “This has to be perfect” to “This needs to be clear, useful, and done within the time I have.”

Small experiments help too. Try sending a low-stakes message without polishing it for too long, changing a familiar route, or finishing a task at “good enough” quality when the situation does not require more. Little by little, the brain learns that imperfection is not dangerous.

What support can do

Therapy can help when perfectionism starts interfering with work, school, relationships, or daily decisions. Approaches that teach emotional regulation, self-compassion, and flexible action may be especially useful, because they target the fear and rigidity beneath the behavior.

At the end of the day, perfectionism becomes a problem when it stops helping a person adapt. Change will always bring uncertainty. The healthier skill is not controlling every detail, but staying steady enough to act when life throws you a curveball and not freeze up. 

The main study has been published in Clinical Psychologist.


Author Profile

Adrian Villellas

Adrián Villellas is a computer engineer and entrepreneur in digital marketing and ad tech. He has led projects in analytics, sustainable advertising, and new audience solutions. He also collaborates on scientific initiatives related to astronomy and space observation. He publishes in science, technology, and environmental media, where he brings complex topics and innovative advances to a wide audience.

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