How do I stop comparing myself to others?

Answered by Dr. Nitnem Singh Sodhi · Mental Health Counsellor, Neuropsychologist & Psychotherapist · Updated 2026-06-09

Short answer

Comparison is a normal social-cognition function that becomes toxic when it runs on curated online data and unclear personal values. Reduce the input, clarify what you actually want, and redirect the metric to your own trajectory.

Why the loop runs

Social comparison is not a defect — it is how humans orient in a group. The problem in 2026 is the data quality: the comparison set is now everyone's highlight reel, permanently on, algorithmically selected to be more successful, more attractive, and more relaxed than reality. The system is trying to do a legitimate job with corrupted inputs.

What to do

Cut the highlight feed. Unfollow the accounts that reliably leave you worse. Write, in one line, what you actually want your life to look like in five years — most comparison energy dissolves the moment you have your own coordinates. Track progress against yourself six months ago, not against strangers today. When comparison lands, name it ('that's comparison'), and return to the task in front of you.

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