Struggle with time management? Practice being perfectly imperfect…

Ben Falkenmire

writer

Ben Falkenmire

Writer

Claim CPD for this activity

Educational Activities (EA)
0 minutes

These are activities that expand general practice knowledge, skills and attitudes, related to your scope of practice.

Reviewing Performance (RP)
0 minutes

These are activities that require reflection on feedback about your work.

Measuring Outcomes (MO)
0 minutes

These are activities that use your work data to ensure quality results.

EA
0 minutes

These are activities that expand general practice knowledge, skills and attitudes, related to your scope of practice.

RP
0 minutes

These are activities that require reflection on feedback about your work.

MO
0 minutes

These are activities that use your work data to ensure quality results.

Ben Falkenmire

 

A key part of GPs’ work is managing risk—but this can sometimes lead to a black and white mindset where every risk must be accounted for, regardless of the cost to time, says psychologist, executive coach and founder of The Anxiety Clinic, Dr Jodie Lowinger.

It is a type of perfectionism that’s driven by care and empathy, and underpinned by fear of doing something wrong or not being good enough, Dr Lowinger says. But it can lead to feeling overwhelmed, and to burnout—and it can sabotage time-management.

“Our brain is wired to focus in on what we feel threatened by,” Dr Lowinger explains. “So if we have a fear of not being good enough, which GPs often deal with because they have to be everything to everyone, then their brain is going to focus in on that, which can tip them into overwhelm and be very burdensome.”

“We need to move out of a fear-driven mindset into focusing on your values. It means shifting from focusing on outcome to focusing on effort, and saying to yourself: I’m going to give my best effort in the time that I’ve got available, and I’m going to be proud of myself for that effort,” she says.

“It’s sitting with the discomfort of uncertainty. Maybe you will be good enough, and maybe you won’t. It’s when we grapple with uncertainty that we trap ourselves in stress.”

Instead, Dr Lowinger says we need to learn to accept and sit with that uncomfortable uncertainty.

She sometimes advises her clients to try out being imperfect on issues that are not critical.

“From time to time, being purposefully imperfect on less critical tasks can allow you to learn that it wasn’t a catastrophe. It is an evidence-based clinical strategy to liberate yourself from the shackles of perfectionism.”

 

 

 

Icon 2

NEXT LIVE Webcast

:
Days
:
Hours
:
Minutes
Seconds
Prof Peter Wong

Prof Peter Wong

Fracture Prevention and Osteoporosis Management After Menopause

Dr Richard Symes

Dr Richard Symes

Ophthalmology Update: New Treatments for Old Conditions

Prof Bu Yeap

Prof Bu Yeap

Testosterone for Men – Common Myths and Recent Development

Dr Victoria Hayes

Dr Victoria Hayes

Conversation Strategies for Unfunded Vaccinations

Join us for the next free webcast for GPs and healthcare professionals

High quality lectures delivered by leading independent experts

Share this

Share this

Ben Falkenmire

writer

Ben Falkenmire

Writer

Test your knowledge

Recent articles

Latest GP poll

In general, do you support allowing non-GPs to refer to specialists in certain situations?

Yes, if the referral process involves meaningful collaboration with GPs

0%

Yes

0%

No

0%

Recent podcasts

Listen to expert interviews.
Click to open in a new tab

Find your area of interest

Once you confirm you’ve read this article you can complete a Patient Case Review to earn 0.5 hours CPD in the Reviewing Performance (RP) category.

Select ‘Confirm & learn‘ when you have read this article in its entirety and you will be taken to begin your Patient Case Review.