The Truth About “Doing Your Best”

"The Truth About “Doing Your Best”

“Just do your best” sounds wise—but whose best? What standard? And at what cost? Sometimes “best” becomes a moving target that fuels exhaustion. Here’s how to reset the phrase so it empowers instead of drains.

Why “Best” Feels Heavy

  • No clear finish line—so you never feel done.
  • Comparison warps standards (your best vs. someone else’s highlight reel).
  • Different seasons = different capacity. Best in burnout ≠ best in balance.

Redefine Best in Context

  • By energy: “Best today is showing up for 20 minutes, not 2 hours.”
  • By role: student vs. friend vs. caregiver—each has different baselines.
  • By season: finals week vs. recovery week call for different standards.

Set “Good Enough” Markers

  • Tier A: absolute musts (food, bills, sleep).
  • Tier B: important but flexible (study, exercise, social).
  • Tier C: extras (deep cleaning, side projects).

Self-Talk Swaps

  • From “I should give 100% always” → To “I’ll match effort to energy.”
  • From “Best means perfect” → To “Best means sustainable.”
  • From “I failed” → To “I adapted.”

Final Thoughts

Doing your best isn’t about maximising effort; it’s about matching effort to energy and values. Define best kindly—or it defines you harshly.


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