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Transcript

Stop Comparing Yourself

How Hierarchies Hijack Self-Worth

Media Links

Website: delvepsych.com
Instagram: @delvepsychchicago
YouTube: ⁠https://www.youtube.com/@DelvePsych20⁠
Substack: ⁠https://delvepsych.substack.com/⁠

Participants

Ali McGarel
Adam W. Fominaya

Overview of big ideas

A listener question opens a familiar ache: how do you stop comparing yourself to others when it’s corroding your self-worth?

Ali and Adam treat comparison as more than a quirky personal flaw. It’s often a learned reflex shaped by social hierarchies, scarcity stories, and the quiet pressure to climb.

They tease apart “doing well at life” from the culturally manufactured scoreboard that tells you what should count. If you’re chasing someone else’s rubric, you’ll stay perpetually behind.

They also normalize the problem without romanticizing it: you may not be responsible for the first comparison-thought, but you do have leverage over what you feed, rehearse, and obey.

The antidote isn’t magical confidence. It’s values. It’s choosing what you actually want, tolerating the discomfort of not optimizing, and building a wider reality than the narrow highlight-reel you’ve been measuring yourself against.

Breakdown of segments

Opening, how to support the show, and a reminder that Delve offers consultation calls plus a small number of very low-fee and occasional pro-bono slots (Illinois-based).

The listener prompt and the comparison spiral: career progress, “emotional stability,” and the shame of feeling envy.

A systems lens: how class, status ladders, and “more is better” conditioning recruit people into relentless self-evaluation.

A pop-culture mirror: a Black Mirror-style world where ratings become destiny, used as a vivid metaphor for social approval addiction.

What change looks like in real life: growth tends to be awkward and uncomfy. The goal isn’t to delete thoughts, but to notice them, name them, and refuse to let them drive.

Concrete experiments: talk honestly with trusted people (even the person you’re comparing yourself to), learn how mutual and hidden comparison often is, and widen your social world by meeting strangers and encountering different contexts.

Closing reflections: gratitude as a daily reorientation, and forgiveness as an internal unburdening that doesn’t require the other person’s participation.

AI Recommended References (APA formatted) Emmons, R. A., & McCullough, M. E. (2003). Counting blessings versus burdens: An experimental investigation of gratitude and subjective well-being in daily life. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 84(2), 377–389. ⁠https://doi.org/10.1037/0022-3514.84.2.377⁠

Festinger, L. (1954). A theory of social comparison processes. Human Relations, 7(2), 117–140. ⁠https://doi.org/10.1177/001872675400700202⁠

Hayes, S. C., Strosahl, K. D., & Wilson, K. G. (1999). Acceptance and commitment therapy: An experiential approach to behavior change. Guilford Press.

Wright, J. (Director). (2016). Nosedive (Season 3, Episode 1) [TV series episode]. In C. Brooker (Creator), Black Mirror. Netflix.

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