The Perfection Trap and How It Backfires for Women

If you’re a woman, chances are you’ve learned how to “keep it together”.

You remember what needs to be done.
You anticipate problems before they surface.
You manage details, emotions, timing, and expectations — often all at once.

From the outside, you look competent, calm, confident.

And yet — inside — there’s a constant current of anxiety:
A sense that if you let your guard down, something will slip.
That getting it wrong will cost you.
That relaxing comes later, once everything is handled.

Don’t mess up.
Don’t drop the ball.
Don’t let anyone down.

You might tell yourself you just care a lot – or that you have high standards. Or maybe that this is simply what being responsible looks like.

But for many women, this constant pressure is a tell-tale sign of perfectionism — and it’s your brain’s way of trying to keep you safe in a world that asks too much of you.

Over time, it can also become a trap.

In this article, we want to reframe perfectionism as a learned, protective response rather than an unchangeable part of who we are. We’ll explore why perfectionism shows up so strongly in women, how it escalates during stress or life transitions, why it backfires, and what can help you break free without lowering your standards or letting things fall apart.

What Perfectionism Is — And Isn’t

Woman looking overwhelmed, hand on face
Woman looking overwhelmed, hand on face

Let’s start by clearing something up:
Perfectionism isn’t the same as “high standards”.

Rather than being a sign of a commitment to excellence, research by Paul Hewitt and Gordon Flett shows perfectionism is a coping pattern shaped by fear, self-protection, and conditional self-worth. In other words, it’s less about achievement and more about avoiding shame, rejection, or perceived inadequacy.

This means that, psychologically speaking, perfectionism isn’t about excellence — it’s about threat avoidance.

At its core, it’s a maladaptive coping strategy.

It’s the belief — often unexamined — that if you do things well enough, right enough, or carefully enough, you can prevent something bad from happening.

Healthy striving sounds like:
I care. I’ll do my best. I’ll learn as I go.

Perfectionism sounds like:
If I don’t get this right, something bad will happen.

That “something bad” might be:

  • criticism
  • rejection
  • shame
  • conflict
  • disappointment
  • embarrassment

Psychologists distinguish between self-oriented perfectionism (high internal demands) and socially prescribed perfectionism, or SPP (the belief that others expect you to be flawless). Research consistently shows that socially prescribed perfectionism is linked to higher distress, anxiety, and burnout — and women are especially likely to internalize these external expectations. (ScienceDirect)

What perfectionism is:

  • A fear-based form of self-protection
  • An attempt to control outcomes (and other people’s feelings or reactions)
  • A way to earn safety, approval, or belonging

What perfectionism isn’t:

  • Being capable
  • Being conscientious
  • Taking pride in your work
  • Having high standards

This is why perfectionism often goes unnoticed. It hides inside behaviors that are socially rewarded — especially in women, and especially at work.

Some common patterns linked to SPP:

  • Overpreparing or overworking
  • Difficulty saying no
  • People-pleasing
  • Hiding struggles
  • Procrastinating driven by a fear of not meeting standards
  • Overthinking 
  • “Mind reading” and catastrophizing

This expression of perfectionism is deeply rooted in the fear of being rejected by others.  It can develop when early childhood experiences show you that belonging depends on not disappointing others, competitive social environments like schools or high-performing workplaces, or family roles where a child is the “responsible one”.  While it is true that certain temperaments are more sensitive to social threat and are therefore more susceptible to SPP, it isn’t an inherent or unchangeable part of someone’s personality.

Why Perfectionism Shows Up So Strongly in Women

woman holding a pen and book

Perfectionism doesn’t appear out of nowhere. It develops over time, shaped by early experiences and reinforced by social context.

Early Conditioning: Being “Good” Was Safer

Many girls are praised early and often for being:

  • Helpful
  • Responsible
  • Emotionally aware
  • Easy to manage

You get praised for being easy going, compliant, and mature for your age. Many girls are praised for handling things that they weren’t developmentally ready to take on.

If you grew up in an environment where criticism was quick, emotions were unpredictable, or expectations were high, you may have learned that doing things well wasn’t optional — it was a prerequisite for physical or psychological safety.

If I do everything right, maybe I won’t be rejected, criticized, shamed, or, in extreme examples, even harmed physically or psychologically.

Over time, this teaches an implicit lesson: getting things right keeps you safe and connected.

Social Expectations: The Moving Target

Women are often expected to:

  • Be competent — but not intimidating.
  • Be confident — but not aggressive.
  • Be put-together — but effortless.
  • Be accommodating — but effective.

When the rules are unclear or constantly shifting, it can feel like no matter what you do, you are upsetting someone or letting someone down.

Research on socially prescribed perfectionism shows that believing others expect flawlessness is strongly associated with anxiety, depression, and distress. Women are more likely to internalize these external expectations — especially in environments where likability and performance are closely linked.  This is the reality of how many women experience school, work, and family dynamics – we are navigating a minefield of other people’s “shoulds” – and get sharply corrected when we step out of line.  Our brain learns to be hypervigilant towards anticipating and meeting the needs and expectations of others. 

The Nervous System Side of the Perfection Trap

Perfectionism isn’t a mindset you can reason your way out of. It’s largely driven by the subconscious realm of your nervous system.

When mistakes have historically led to criticism or stress, the nervous system learns to recognize error as a threat. You can literally feel it – your body tightens, your attention narrows, your heart races.  It makes sense that research shows SPP is linked with heightened anxiety, chronic stress, and burnout. (Flett et al., 2016)  It’s an adaptation that probably keeps you safe in certain situations or environments.  It also, left unchallenged and unchecked, develops into a pattern that creates unnecessary stress and holds you back.

How Perfectionism Backfires

Woman outdoors holding notebook walking thoughtfully

Over time, perfectionism creates new problems. Especially as women enter midlife, research by Timothy Salthouse shows that there are cognitive shifts that happen that make perfectionist tendencies unmanageable to maintain. His research shows that, starting as early as our 30s and 40s:

  • Cognitive processing speed starts to decline,
  • Working  memory efficiency decreases,
  • Executive control takes more energy and effort, and 
  • Performance variability increases.

For someone with unchecked perfectionism, this can tip them into a situation where it isn’t possible to maintain the very tendencies that have signalled safety to their nervous system, resulting in:

  • Heightened anxiety and self-criticism, hallmark characteristics of the perfectionist mind, go into overdrive as it becomes impossible to keep up with life demands and our own unreasonable expectations,
  • Emotional exhaustion that can mimic or even lead to depression, robbing you of joy, satisfaction, or any sense of contentment, 
  • Procrastination and decision paralysis that comes from avoiding anything that feels even slightly risky, 
  • Burnout, not from overwork, but from the collapse of self-worth that has been tied to performance and external validation.   

Ultimately, women find themselves feeling completely disconnected from themselves.  

Having spent years focusing on the expectations of others — real or imagined — and living by trying to constantly anticipate what other people want, need, expect, feel, or will do – you lose the ability to connect with and express what you actually want or need.

What Women Want to Know

Two people working together at a table one looks unsure tense

When women seek out information about perfectionism, they’re often looking for understanding.  These FAQs are included to clarify how perfectionism can develop and how it can be reshaped to more supportive patterns of thinking:

Why am I so hard on myself?
Because self-criticism once helped you stay safe or ensured you belonged.  If you were the most critical voice in the room, you could avoid the rejection or disapproval of others.  

Is perfectionism a trauma response?
For some women, yes. When mistakes carried emotional or physical cost, the nervous system adapted. For others, perfectionism developed through chronic pressure, responsibility, or social conditioning. (Flett & Hewitt, 2002

If you have a sense that your perfectionism may be rooted in trauma, working with a trauma informed therapist or counsellor can be very beneficial.

How do I stop overthinking everything?
Overthinking often signals that your system doesn’t feel safe.  One of the easiest ways to quiet your mind is to ask – who is expecting this of me?  The SPP answer is often vague – “they”, “people”, “clients”, or another generic response is an indicator that you might be in a SPP spin cycle.

See if you can trace a real expectation to a real person, policy, or commitment.  If you can, narrow your focus to doing the next step towards addressing that expectation.  If you can’t?  

Try having a kind, compassionate chat with the part of you that is overthinking.  It might sound silly – but thank her for scanning and being on the lookout for things that could go wrong but let her know that, when there isn’t something specific, it’s okay to quiet down and focus on only what’s real.

How do I let go of control without things falling apart?
You don’t let go all at once. You get strategic, decide what truly matters — and start to practice “good enough” everywhere else.  It can be distressing – if you experience major distress, don’t push yourself – and again, you may want to explore why this is happening to you with a trauma informed therapist.  

Stepping Out of the Perfection Trap (Without Lowering Your Standards)

Letting go of perfectionism doesn’t mean caring less. It’s about moving away from reactive patterns of thinking that can make things feel more urgent and risky than they actually are.  If you need a few more practical ideas on how to tiptoe into doing this work, we’ve included some ideas below:

  1.  Define “Done” Before You Start

Before starting a task, ask:

  • What is this actually for?
  • What does “done” need to look like?
  • What’s the cost of overdoing this?
  • How much time do I have to get this done?

This helps you think through what the end product needs to look like and how important the quality of your output is versus the time you could spend on something else.  It forces you to think through what the stakes ACTUALLY are as opposed to going with your brain’s default mode that tells you everything is critically important and the sky will fall if you don’t knock it out of the park.

  1. Use a Simple Capacity Check

Once a day, try:

  • What do I realistically have energy for?
  • What’s essential?
  • What can wait?

Perfectionism can lead to pushing ourselves chronically past our limits, which, ironically, creates the perfect conditions for errors to be made, rather than avoided. If you need a quick way to get clear on priorities and to plan your day in a way that protects your energy and capacity, check out our free Bandwidth Reality Check.  This short course takes less than an hour and gives you a repeatable process for prioritizing your commitments that you can come back to anytime you feel yourself overwhelmed or spinning out of control.

  1. Hear the Inner Critic

Instead of arguing with your inner critic, get curious:

  • What are you trying to protect me from?
  • What feels unsafe right now?

This is “real talk” with your own nervous system.  Think of the inner critic as your inner child and ask that child ‘what did you not get that you needed’? Protection is often the underlying goal of that nasty voice inside your head – so let it be heard.  You can literally talk out loud to yourself, journal – or talk it out with someone that you trust.

  1. Build Self-Trust in Small Ways

Choose low-stakes experiments to challenge your perfectionist ways:

  • Send a message without rewriting
  • Leave something undone
  • Ask for help when you’re not in a crisis

This gives your brain evidence that you can be less than perfect and things will be okay.  While the above examples might seem small, doing small acts persistently is the way to shift patterns of thinking that have taken years to develop.  You don’t want to throw your system into panic mode by starting with something that really does have big stakes attached to it.  You could even start a ‘less than’ journal for taking note daily of the little ways you are letting go – and treat yourself for your efforts!

THE BOTTOM LINE

Smiling Woman in Brown Coat Standing

Perfectionism isn’t who you are.

It’s something you learned in response to pressure, responsibility, and expectation.

If it’s costing you your peace, your energy, and your connection to yourself… or it’s holding you…you are allowed to make a change. 

The solution isn’t caring less or beating yourself up for the way you are thinking, feeling, or behaving.  Change comes from compassionate and caring self talk and slow, steady, deliberate changes that compound with time.

THE GOOD NEWS

You don’t need to “fix” yourself, lower your standards, or become someone who doesn’t care.

Try some of the strategies we’ve outlined and track your progress.  What could be different in your life if, in a year’s time:

You made decisions with less overthinking.
You recovered more quickly when things didn’t go as planned.
You felt less driven by fear — and more energetic and free.

If you want to explore this further:

  • Download “The Bandwidth Reality Check” and start with a real assessment of what perfectionism might be doing to your capacity and energy, 
  • Subscribe to the Forward, in Focus newsletter to receive gentle, grounded tools designed for real life 

Start with admitting you saw yourself in this article and committing to one small practice from the ideas it contained.  If perfectionism is holding you back, let today be the day you start to let it go….

With love,
Angelina

Angelina Christine is the founder, strategist, and coach behind Forward in Focus.
Drawing on 20 years in executive leadership, governance, and a deep interest in human behaviour, Angelina helps high-achievers who are overwhelmed by caregiving, career demands, and chronic work strain reconnect with themselves and rebuild capacity.

Her work blends strategy, neuroscience, and grounded coaching to help clients step out of survival mode and lead with clarity, confidence, and agency.

About Angelina

Lead Yourself First

Grounded, honest reflections to help you understand your capacity, reduce overwhelm, and reconnect with the version of you that feels clear, capable, and in control again.

About Angelina