The Success Traps

How To Avoid The Success Traps: 5 Tips To Help You

How to avoid success traps in your pursuit of achievement.

Key points

  • Achievers tend to idealize success and forget that it comes with its fair share of challenges.
  • We often pursue goals without fully comprehending how they may impact us in the future.
  • Practicing gratitude and humility can protect you from the negative effects of personal success.
Success Traps

As a psychiatrist, I have the privilege of sitting front row in peopleโ€™s lives. They share with me their hopes, wishes, and aspirations. A common theme I hear is the drive to be successful in pursuit of happiness.

Odds are you followed a similar pathway. You set your sights on a professional goal such as earning a degree, building a business, or climbing the corporate ladder, believing it would ultimately make you happier.

The same holds true for your personal life. You might have sought happiness in status symbols that represent success such as living in an affluent neighborhood, buying a lake house, or driving a fancy car.

Regardless of the goal, the formula is predictable. You spent a significant amount of effort, time, and money to become successful believing it would lead to a more satisfying life.

As you reflect on your individual accomplishments, ask yourself the following question: โ€œHow much has success contributed to my overall happiness?โ€

Perhaps, you are one of the lucky few who stumbled onto happiness following this path. Truth is many accomplished people are deeply dissatisfied and suffer greatly behind a faรงade of achievements. They yearn for more out of life but donโ€™t know how to proceed.

Their lives teach us a valuable lesson. Success does not equal happiness.

Making your happiness dependent on achievement comes with hidden traps. The first is you cannot know what something is like until you fully immerse yourself in that experience. It is only through immersion that you can see behind the curtain and fully comprehend what you were pursuing in the first place.

As a personal example, I could never comprehend what being a physician entailed until I became one. Hours of volunteering at the local emergency department and shadowing doctors could not prepare me for the grind of working 30-hour shifts during my residency training, taking day-long exams or the aggravation of navigating a fragmented, disjointed health care system. I had to become a physician to fully comprehend the joys and frustrations of medicine.

The second trap is you cannot know how you will define success or happiness in the future. Human beings are dynamic. Your future values, beliefs and desires may be completely different than your current ones. This means that you may be currently on a path that is not aligned with your future self.

Think about how often this happens in relationships. Two people enter a relationship believing they are a great match. Give it a decade (or often much less time) and they no longer feel compatible. One reason is because they have evolved into different people with a different set of values, perspectives and preferences.

The third trap is the tendency to idealize success and minimize its negative impact on different parts of your life. The pursuit of success can take a toll on your health, relationships and even your ability to fully experience life.

As a personal example, my studies to become a psychiatrist included four years of medical school followed by four years of residency training. I spent the majority of my 20s hunched over a book at a library rather than backpacking to different parts of the world. Despite my best efforts, I can never make up for the lost time.

Pointing out the traps associated with success is not intended to discourage you from pursuing your individual goals. The intention is to help you have a healthy relationship with achievement by not making your happiness completely dependent on it.

Read More Here: The โ€˜Grass Is Greenerโ€™ Syndrome: Why You Always Want More (But Never Feel Satisfied)

How To Avoid The Success Traps

Here are five tips to help you attain this:

1. Remain balanced

As an achiever, the temptation is to zoom in on your individual goals and neglect everything else. Sacrificing your health and loved ones at the altar of achievement is a grave mistake.

Invest in your health and relationships while you pursue your individual goals. Success is a shallow outcome if you have nobody to share it with or if you are not healthy enough to enjoy it.

2. Recalibrate expectations

Do not equate success with happiness. Success comes with its fair share of challenges such as increased responsibilities, a loss of freedom and being under greater scrutiny.

It is not always sunny with clear blue skies when you make it to the top of your mountain. There will be plenty of overcast days with strong winds and heavy rain.

3. Shift your success meter

Achievers tend to have a narrow definition of success that is outcome-focused. As a result, they fail to recognize the important benefits associated with the process of setting and attaining goals.

One such benefit is self-discovery. Going through adversity reveals valuable information about who you are.

An additional benefit is personal growth. Pursuing any goal will help you cultivate new skills and abilities that you did not previously possess.

The true reason to pursue a particular goal is not necessarily to attain that single goal but to evolve into a person who is capable of overcoming adversity during the pursuit of any goal.

4. Be more present

When pursuing any goal, it is tempting to look ahead at the destination and ignore the journey leading to it. This is the equivalent of going on a long hike and being so preoccupied with making it to the finish line that you ignore the sights and sounds along the way.

Take a moment to appreciate how much progress you have made on your journey regardless of where you are. If you are in graduate school, appreciate the achievement of being there in the first place. If you have a stable job and are providing for loved ones, acknowledge a job well done.

5. Practice humility

Success can feel intoxicating when it comes with recognition and praise. It can make you feel special as if you stand apart from the crowd.

Truth is every single one of us is a mosaic of strengths and weaknesses. Practicing humility can protect you from oscillating between the highs of success and lows of inevitable failure.

Share your thoughts in the comments below!

Read More Here: Why Being Bad At Something Is The First Step To Greatness

Dimitrios Tsatiris M.D is a practicing board certified psychiatrist who is a leading voice at the intersection of mental health and achievement. You can follow him @drdimitrios on Instagram and X. For more articles, check out his website dimitriostsatiris.com.


Written by Dimitrios Tsatiris, M.D.
Originally apppeared on Psychology Today

the success trap

Published On:

Last updated on:

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At first glance, the injunction to be humble does not sound very attractive. It seems to be in conflict with our current valorization of self-esteem and self-worth, and to contradict the ubiquitous personal development advice that we should celebrate our achievements and take pride in ourselves.

But humility does not mean meekness, and neither does it equate to weakness. In fact, this ancient virtue has nothing to do with adopting a self-effacing or submissive doormat mentality and is not to be mistaken simply for low self-esteem.

<

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Even if you are an introvert, research suggests some painless ways to meet new friends.

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Not all locations are equal when it comes to meeting other people like you.

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Powerlessness isnโ€™t failure; itโ€™s a boundary that protects our energy.

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Your night time habits play a huge role in how well you sleep, how rested you feel, and how emotionally balanced you are the next day. In fact, studies have shown that simple changes to your sleep routine can boost your mood, improve focus, and even reduce stress levels when you wake up.

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Success and power have many facets.

You can have every material success in the world and still not be happy. Happiness comes from within and without.

As a psychiatrist and empath, I respect that each person has different values and needs. Because of this, I know never to judge a personโ€™s happiness simply by how they appear to the world.

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This isn’t always noble and the right thing to do. It is related to a pattern known as the self sacrifice schema, which involves a deeply rooted belief that other peopleโ€™s needs always come before your own.

It often starts early in life. Maybe you were praised for being โ€œthe helper.โ€ Maybe you learned that expressing your own needs caused conflict, or that your role was to keep others happy. Over time, this belief becomes automatic. You give too much, too often, until you’re left feeling invisible and exhausted. You’re a people-pleaser now.

But by just b

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The Success Traps

How To Avoid The Success Traps: 5 Tips To Help You

How to avoid success traps in your pursuit of achievement.

Key points

  • Achievers tend to idealize success and forget that it comes with its fair share of challenges.
  • We often pursue goals without fully comprehending how they may impact us in the future.
  • Practicing gratitude and humility can protect you from the negative effects of personal success.
Success Traps

As a psychiatrist, I have the privilege of sitting front row in peopleโ€™s lives. They share with me their hopes, wishes, and aspirations. A common theme I hear is the drive to be successful in pursuit of happiness.

Odds are you followed a similar pathway. You set your sights on a professional goal such as earning a degree, building a business, or climbing the corporate ladder, believing it would ultimately make you happier.

The same holds true for your personal life. You might have sought happiness in status symbols that represent success such as living in an affluent neighborhood, buying a lake house, or driving a fancy car.

Regardless of the goal, the formula is predictable. You spent a significant amount of effort, time, and money to become successful believing it would lead to a more satisfying life.

As you reflect on your individual accomplishments, ask yourself the following question: โ€œHow much has success contributed to my overall happiness?โ€

Perhaps, you are one of the lucky few who stumbled onto happiness following this path. Truth is many accomplished people are deeply dissatisfied and suffer greatly behind a faรงade of achievements. They yearn for more out of life but donโ€™t know how to proceed.

Their lives teach us a valuable lesson. Success does not equal happiness.

Making your happiness dependent on achievement comes with hidden traps. The first is you cannot know what something is like until you fully immerse yourself in that experience. It is only through immersion that you can see behind the curtain and fully comprehend what you were pursuing in the first place.

As a personal example, I could never comprehend what being a physician entailed until I became one. Hours of volunteering at the local emergency department and shadowing doctors could not prepare me for the grind of working 30-hour shifts during my residency training, taking day-long exams or the aggravation of navigating a fragmented, disjointed health care system. I had to become a physician to fully comprehend the joys and frustrations of medicine.

The second trap is you cannot know how you will define success or happiness in the future. Human beings are dynamic. Your future values, beliefs and desires may be completely different than your current ones. This means that you may be currently on a path that is not aligned with your future self.

Think about how often this happens in relationships. Two people enter a relationship believing they are a great match. Give it a decade (or often much less time) and they no longer feel compatible. One reason is because they have evolved into different people with a different set of values, perspectives and preferences.

The third trap is the tendency to idealize success and minimize its negative impact on different parts of your life. The pursuit of success can take a toll on your health, relationships and even your ability to fully experience life.

As a personal example, my studies to become a psychiatrist included four years of medical school followed by four years of residency training. I spent the majority of my 20s hunched over a book at a library rather than backpacking to different parts of the world. Despite my best efforts, I can never make up for the lost time.

Pointing out the traps associated with success is not intended to discourage you from pursuing your individual goals. The intention is to help you have a healthy relationship with achievement by not making your happiness completely dependent on it.

Read More Here: The โ€˜Grass Is Greenerโ€™ Syndrome: Why You Always Want More (But Never Feel Satisfied)

How To Avoid The Success Traps

Here are five tips to help you attain this:

1. Remain balanced

As an achiever, the temptation is to zoom in on your individual goals and neglect everything else. Sacrificing your health and loved ones at the altar of achievement is a grave mistake.

Invest in your health and relationships while you pursue your individual goals. Success is a shallow outcome if you have nobody to share it with or if you are not healthy enough to enjoy it.

2. Recalibrate expectations

Do not equate success with happiness. Success comes with its fair share of challenges such as increased responsibilities, a loss of freedom and being under greater scrutiny.

It is not always sunny with clear blue skies when you make it to the top of your mountain. There will be plenty of overcast days with strong winds and heavy rain.

3. Shift your success meter

Achievers tend to have a narrow definition of success that is outcome-focused. As a result, they fail to recognize the important benefits associated with the process of setting and attaining goals.

One such benefit is self-discovery. Going through adversity reveals valuable information about who you are.

An additional benefit is personal growth. Pursuing any goal will help you cultivate new skills and abilities that you did not previously possess.

The true reason to pursue a particular goal is not necessarily to attain that single goal but to evolve into a person who is capable of overcoming adversity during the pursuit of any goal.

4. Be more present

When pursuing any goal, it is tempting to look ahead at the destination and ignore the journey leading to it. This is the equivalent of going on a long hike and being so preoccupied with making it to the finish line that you ignore the sights and sounds along the way.

Take a moment to appreciate how much progress you have made on your journey regardless of where you are. If you are in graduate school, appreciate the achievement of being there in the first place. If you have a stable job and are providing for loved ones, acknowledge a job well done.

5. Practice humility

Success can feel intoxicating when it comes with recognition and praise. It can make you feel special as if you stand apart from the crowd.

Truth is every single one of us is a mosaic of strengths and weaknesses. Practicing humility can protect you from oscillating between the highs of success and lows of inevitable failure.

Share your thoughts in the comments below!

Read More Here: Why Being Bad At Something Is The First Step To Greatness

Dimitrios Tsatiris M.D is a practicing board certified psychiatrist who is a leading voice at the intersection of mental health and achievement. You can follow him @drdimitrios on Instagram and X. For more articles, check out his website dimitriostsatiris.com.


Written by Dimitrios Tsatiris, M.D.
Originally apppeared on Psychology Today

the success trap

Published On:

Last updated on:

,

— About the Author —

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Up Next

Spiritual Modesty: Why Humility Is More Powerful Than You Think

Spiritual Modesty: Why Humility Is More Powerful Than You Think

Spiritual modesty isnโ€™t about putting yourself downโ€”itโ€™s about seeing the bigger picture. The importance of humility goes way beyond being โ€œniceโ€ or polite. So what is humility, and what can it actually do for us? From better relationships to sharper thinking, its benefits might just surprise you.

At first glance, the injunction to be humble does not sound very attractive. It seems to be in conflict with our current valorization of self-esteem and self-worth, and to contradict the ubiquitous personal development advice that we should celebrate our achievements and take pride in ourselves.

But humility does not mean meekness, and neither does it equate to weakness. In fact, this ancient virtue has nothing to do with adopting a self-effacing or submissive doormat mentality and is not to be mistaken simply for low self-esteem.

<

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Most people assume that being an eternal optimist means you see the world with rose-colored glasses. But you don’t always wakes up with a smile, and itโ€™s not all always blind hope.

Hereโ€™s the part no one really talks about: being an eternal optimist is exhausting.

But it also has some good parts like it helps you bounce back, believe in second chances, and find meaning even in mess.

Up Next

Moving From Stranger To Friend: 3 Tips

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Turning a stranger to friend doesnโ€™t have to be overwhelming. Even introverts can build meaningful connections with a few simple strategies. Here’s how to meet new friends.

You don’t have to be an extravert to connect with strangers.

Key points

Even if you are an introvert, research suggests some painless ways to meet new friends.

People like others who are like them, so look for important values you share with others.

It helps to make yourself useful.

Not all locations are equal when it comes to meeting other people like you.

Up Next

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What Is Guilt Really? 4 Ways To Let Go Of It

What is guilt, really? Is it a moral compass, a learned response, or something deeper rooted in identity and accountability? Letโ€™s explore with David Prucha.

How guilt can protect us from a feeling we like even less.

Key points

Guilt can feel like hope, it offers the illusion that change is still possible.

Powerlessness isnโ€™t failure; itโ€™s a boundary that protects our energy.

Letting go of guilt allows rest, which prepares us for when action truly matters.

Up Next

5 Things To Do At Night To Wake Up Feeling Happier!

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Thereโ€™s nothing quite like waking up and feeling good, rested, clear-headed, and evenโ€ฆhappy. But for many of us, mornings feel more like a slow crawl out of a fog. If youโ€™re waking up groggy, or in a bad mood, the solution might not lie in your morning coffee or alarm clock. Instead, it starts with the things to do at night!

Your night time habits play a huge role in how well you sleep, how rested you feel, and how emotionally balanced you are the next day. In fact, studies have shown that simple changes to your sleep routine can boost your mood, improve focus, and even reduce stress levels when you wake up.

Up Next

Defining True Success And Power: What Do Theyย Really Mean?

True Success and Power: What Do Theyย Really Mean? 3 Keys

You chase success and power, but have you ever paused to ask what they truly mean for you, your life, and your deeper purpose? Let’s find out below!

Success and power have many facets.

You can have every material success in the world and still not be happy. Happiness comes from within and without.

As a psychiatrist and empath, I respect that each person has different values and needs. Because of this, I know never to judge a personโ€™s happiness simply by how they appear to the world.

Up Next

Giving Too Much? 6 Signs You’re Caught In Chronic Self Sacrifice Cycle

6 Signs Of Chronic Self Sacrifice And Giving Too Much

Do you give up things for your partner? Feel responsible for your parentsโ€™ happiness? Does saying no make you feel guilty? If so, you might be caught in a cycle of chronic self sacrifice. Want to know more? Read on below.

This isn’t always noble and the right thing to do. It is related to a pattern known as the self sacrifice schema, which involves a deeply rooted belief that other peopleโ€™s needs always come before your own.

It often starts early in life. Maybe you were praised for being โ€œthe helper.โ€ Maybe you learned that expressing your own needs caused conflict, or that your role was to keep others happy. Over time, this belief becomes automatic. You give too much, too often, until you’re left feeling invisible and exhausted. You’re a people-pleaser now.

But by just b