Good, Perfect, Better, Good
Enough
Too often we get stuck in a "climb the
ladder" mode where chasing a degree of "better" is a
never-ending process. In large part, chasing, growing, developing,
climbing...seeking better isn't a bad thing. Becoming a constant learner
who gets better at their faith, their family, their hobbies, their
relationships, and so forth over a lifetime...those are good things.
There is power in small, incremental growth steps that build and compound over
decades. I'd like to think I'm a better father now than when we first had
our kids. I'd also like to think I'm becoming a better father through
study, practice, and prayer in the future.

The dark side of "continuous
improvement" comes when we let the constant climb be a bottomless pit or a
topless mountain. Think about it in terms of a grading rubric for a
minute. Let's use family finance as an example with a
"perfect/A+/extra credit" being the pinnacle of everything exactly in
working order. Now determine what an A-, B, C, D, F look like in your
family. Perhaps a "good" grade or A is making your bills every
month with some margin for future expenses down the road. Maybe a
"good enough" is a B which means all your bills are covered and you
have the occasional splurges like a summer vacation or something.

When we start talking about "what's gotta
give" to get to the next/desired echelon in our example the conversation
begins to become more honest. "We can achieve ABC with the time/
energy /investment/ commitment we're willing to make as a family in this season
of life." If we make our polar star "better" instead of a
defined end state, the constant hunt begins to run over our "what's gotta
give." Let's say, our example, our "what's gotta give"
honest conversation about "good enough" is a job that doesn't require
a ton of travel, home with the family, work within work hours, and so
forth. The intersection of peace of mind between income and outgo
"how" conversations is the sweet spot we're seeking.

The Bible talks about the "love of
money" as the root of all evil. In our above example, the always
hungry "better" lies to us with the nicer car, nicer house, nicer
clothes, nicer food, and nicer vacations are a must, a pre-req to
happiness. With each "nicer/better" ratchet upwards our
baseline standard slowly adjusts. I know when traveling as a single guy
in the military, newly married hubby, and now years later...our standard of
travel has changed. Some of that is okay...some of that is great.
You probably shouldn't be sleeping in cars after driving all night with kids
after driving back from some faraway adventure for your whole life. That
said, there's always a "better" in front of you...a nicer hotel, a
4-star instead of 3...then a 5 instead of 4...then a "black card elite
instead of a 5" sort of ladder. Finding your "spot" and
sticking with it is key to happiness and contentment. Look for the 1%
small changes that bring a "luxury" to life...not the 10%/year/person/whim
that becomes rapidly unsustainable.

Shifting gears a little bit to other categories
of our lives, hopefully, the clarity of "good enough" as an end zone
comes into sharper focus. When we got married, did any of our vows say
"Until I find someone better?" That'd be a pretty demoralizing
entry point into a lifelong commitment...does anyone honestly wonder why our
divorce rate is so high? Imagine telling your child that you'd prefer the
"better" version of themselves...e.g. some other kid. Again,
I'm not saying our calling as humans isn't to "iron sharpen iron" and
make those around us better versions of themselves. I am saying there is
no mileage in the constant trade-up to a standard that shifts in the
wind.

Let's talk physical health for a minute...am I in
better shape at 40 than 20? No. Am I in good enough shape at 40 to
stay active with our kids, lead them on hikes, carry them occasionally when
they need it, and so forth? Yes. Can I (we all) be in better
physical shape? Yes. Should we quit our jobs, move to the gym, get
an IV drip of pre-workout, and attempt to make our ears more muscular?
Probably not. Better or perfect isn't the standard when we think about it
in these terms...good enough is a more manageable, more balanced
approach.

To put it in another light, we've been at a
career crossroads here recently...in doing some more work with contractors in
our profession it's come to light that there is some serious money to be made
in that space. The professional growth and contributions are
"shinier" over there. The promotion potential is higher.
That all said, in one recent conversation with a contractor friend he said
"The job posting says 75% travel...in reality it's probably closer to
90...just so you know." Would going over to the "dark
side" be "better" in some respects? Probably. Would
it be better for our marriage? No. Would it be better for our
family? No. Is my current job "good enough?"
Yes. That doesn't mean I can't work each day to do better work, make our
team better, and set an example of focus for others...within my 40 hours.
That "within" is the key word that helps us enforce the "good
enough" in our lives.

Shifting gears one more time to volunteerism and
faith. We've got family friends who are "those people" - the
"same ten people" types that are volunteering for
everything...they're Kiwanis members, board members at United Way, serve on
multiple things at church, and so forth. In the quiet conversations, the
ones just past the public front they put up...they're exhausted and resentful
that "they have to keep being those people." Without the
"good enough" finish line, any "good thing" that floated
past them, despite being "one too many good things" ended up on their
plate. Over time, too many good things have diluted their ability to do
well at any of the good things...and ultimately their quality of life.
Within what you're willing to give...be the best server/volunteer for the
causes you're passionate about. Don't let "better" or perfect
be the enemy that slowly sinks your ship from a thousand cuts.

Lastly, as we depart, we've talked about it
before but the "perfect being the enemy of good" can lead to some
ugly procrastination. We've had those projects around the house that have
been on the back burner waiting for "the" perfect time or
"the" perfect set of circumstances to get started. We recently
put in a "good enough" light in the living room. It'd been on
the back burner, waiting for just the right conditions - finding the right
light, the right price, the right weather to get into the attic, and so
forth. The "good enough" light has transformed our living room
into "almost a whole new house" and we've found ourselves utilizing
the space way more as a family. In the projects of your life, don't let
the false standard of perfection lock your parking brake from getting started...good
enough is good enough. As we pump the brakes this week, hopefully,
you've got some things to think about. Hopefully, you're convinced that
"good enough" is a good standard. If you're not sure yet, go
tell your spouse tonight that effective immediately you'll be in the market for
a "better" or "perfect" version...word to the wise...maybe
look for a perfect couch before you spring that little gem. As we part,
don't stop working on the "getting better" in your life...but with
the important "within what I'm willing to give" lens of good
enough. Good luck!
With you in the arena, from ours to yours...Happy
Trails!
Call to Action:
- Pick out something that you're going to be "good
enough" on and write out three descriptions of what that looks like -
practical, tangible steps.
- 1 -
___________________
- 2 -
___________________
- 3 -
___________________
- Discussion: Consider what you/your family could/would/should (level
of commitment) and start/stop/sustain (action)
Further Reading, Motivation, and References:
- Why Good Enough is
Good Enough