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Deliberate Small Mistakes: Practicing Imperfection in Public

Key Takeaways
  1. 1. Perfectionism Keeps You Safe by Keeping You Small

    • Socially prescribed perfectionism fuels the belief that others demand flawlessness
    • Safety behaviors prevent disconfirmation of perfectionist threat predictions
    • Deliberate mistake-making is a behavioral experiment targeting error-specific fear
  2. 2. The Ladder Starts Lower Than You Think

    • Graduated exposure keeps your stress response from blocking new learning
    • Each rung tests a slightly bolder version of the same perfectionist prediction
    • An exit strategy protects the practice from reinforcing the shame cycle
  3. 3. What Shifts Isn't the Fear, It's What the Fear Means to You

    • Behavioral experiments update beliefs through experience, not logic alone
    • The goal isn't eliminating anxiety but changing what anxiety means to you
    • Each experiment adds a data point against perfectionism's core prediction
References & Sources (12)

Every claim above is grounded in a primary source below, each one verified against academic citation databases and matched to what the study actually found.

  1. Hewitt, P.L., & Flett, G.L. (1991). Perfectionism in the Self and Social Contexts: Conceptualization, Assessment, and Association with Psychopathology. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 60(3), 456-470.

    What we learned: Established the three-dimensional model of perfectionism, with socially prescribed perfectionism providing the theoretical foundation for why error-fear in this article is driven by perceived external demands for flawlessness.

  2. Flett, G.L., Hewitt, P.L., & De Rosa, T. (1996). Dimensions of Perfectionism, Psychosocial Adjustment, and Social Skills. Personality and Individual Differences, 20(2), 143-150.

    What we learned: Demonstrated that socially prescribed perfectionism predicted social anxiety uniquely beyond other perfectionism dimensions, establishing the specific link between perceived external standards and anxiety that deliberate mistake-making targets.

  3. Alden, L.E., Bieling, P.J., & Wallace, S.T. (1994). Perfectionism in an Interpersonal Context: A Self-Regulation Analysis of Dysphoria and Social Anxiety. Cognitive Therapy and Research, 18(4), 297-316.

    What we learned: Found that socially prescribed perfectionists interpret ambiguous social feedback as negative, explaining the interpretation bias that deliberate mistake-making aims to disconfirm through direct experience.

  4. Ellis, A. (1962). Reason and Emotion in Psychotherapy. Lyle Stuart.

    What we learned: Originated shame-attacking exercises, the conceptual ancestor of deliberate mistake-making, while targeting broader social discomfort rather than the perfectionism-specific error fear narrowed in this article.

  5. Bennett-Levy, J., Westbrook, D., Fennell, M., Cooper, M., Rouf, K., & Hackmann, A. (2004). Behavioural Experiments: Historical and Conceptual Underpinnings. In Oxford Guide to Behavioural Experiments in Cognitive Therapy (Oxford University Press).

    What we learned: Demonstrated that behavioral experiments produce larger belief changes than verbal restructuring for emotionally charged core beliefs, providing the empirical rationale for experiential over propositional approaches to perfectionism.

  6. Salkovskis, P.M. (1991). The Importance of Behaviour in the Maintenance of Anxiety and Panic: A Cognitive Account. Behavioural Psychotherapy, 19(1), 6-19.

    What we learned: Modeled how safety behaviors maintain anxiety by preventing disconfirmation of threat beliefs, explaining why perfectionist over-preparation sustains rather than resolves the fear of being seen as incompetent.

  7. Thwaites, R., & Freeston, M.H. (2005). Safety-Seeking Behaviours: Fact or Function? How Can We Clinically Differentiate Between Safety Behaviours and Adaptive Coping Strategies Across Anxiety Disorders?. Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapy, 33(2), 177-188.

    What we learned: Clarified that within-situation safety behaviors like checking and rehearsing are as damaging to recovery as full avoidance, relevant to understanding why perfectionist micro-strategies maintain anxiety even when the person shows up.

  8. Shafran, R., Cooper, Z., & Fairburn, C.G. (2002). Clinical Perfectionism: A Cognitive-Behavioural Analysis. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 40(7), 773-791.

    What we learned: Identified rigid dichotomous self-evaluation as the central maintaining mechanism of clinical perfectionism — the specific target that deliberate mistake-making disrupts by introducing a survived-imperfection category.

  9. Egan, S.J., Wade, T.D., Shafran, R., & Antony, M.M. (2014). Cognitive-Behavioral Treatment of Perfectionism. Guilford Press.

    What we learned: Provided the clinical framework for graduated behavioral experiments in perfectionism treatment, including the stepped ladder approach and the development of a 'good enough' performance threshold that replaces the demand for flawlessness.

  10. Foa, E.B., & Kozak, M.J. (1986). Emotional Processing of Fear: Exposure to Corrective Information. Psychological Bulletin, 99(1), 20-35.

    What we learned: Established that fear modification requires activation of the fear structure plus incompatible information, providing the theoretical basis for why graduated exposure must balance fear activation against processing capacity.

  11. Craske, M.G., Treanor, M., Conway, C.C., Zbozinek, T., & Vervliet, B. (2014). Maximizing Exposure Therapy: An Inhibitory Learning Approach. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 58, 10-23.

    What we learned: Proposed inhibitory learning as the mechanism of exposure-based change, explaining why fear doesn't disappear but loses authority as competing safety associations accumulate, and why perceived control enhances learning quality.

  12. Barlow, D.H. (2002). Anxiety and Its Disorders: The Nature and Treatment of Anxiety and Panic. Guilford Press (2nd edition).

    What we learned: Identified perceived uncontrollability as a core vulnerability factor in anxiety, supporting the importance of exit strategies that preserve the person's sense of choice during deliberate mistake-making exercises.

Perfectionism Keeps You Safe by Keeping You Small

Perfectionism comes in more than one flavor, and the kind most tangled with anxiety is socially prescribed perfectionism — the belief that other people expect you to be flawless. People with high socially prescribed perfectionism don't just want to do well. They believe others will reject them if they fall short. That belief transforms ordinary situations into evaluative gauntlets. A meeting becomes a performance review. A casual conversation becomes a test. And mistakes become evidence of a flaw that everyone can suddenly see.

This creates a maintenance cycle that's hard to break from the inside. When you believe mistakes reveal incompetence, you develop safety behaviors: over-preparing, checking, rehearsing, avoiding situations where you can't guarantee a flawless outcome. These behaviors prevent mistakes, and that feels like success. But they also prevent you from discovering that mistakes are survivable — that most people barely notice them. Researchers who study anxiety maintenance have found that safety behaviors are among the strongest predictors of whether anxiety persists. You stay afraid because you never collect the evidence that would contradict the fear.

Deliberate mistake-making works differently from general shame-attacking exercises because it targets a specific belief rather than broad social discomfort. In shame-attacking, you might do something widely embarrassing — singing loudly in public, wearing a costume to the grocery store. In deliberate mistake-making for perfectionism, you're testing one precise prediction: "If I make a visible error, people will conclude I'm incompetent." You mispronounce a word on purpose and watch whether anyone treats you differently. You give the wrong change and notice the cashier's actual reaction. Each experiment is calibrated to the exact fear driving your perfectionism — not embarrassment in general, but the terror of being seen as someone who doesn't have it together.

The Ladder Starts Lower Than You Think

Behavioral experiments for anxiety work best when the person is anxious enough to activate their feared prediction but not so overwhelmed that cognitive processing shuts down. Research on emotional processing has shown that moderate levels of fear activation are optimal for belief updating. If you're too calm, there's no prediction to test. If you're too distressed, you can't encode the corrective information. This is why a graduated ladder matters: you start with mistakes that produce mild discomfort and gradually increase the stakes as your tolerance builds.

A practical ladder for perfectionism-driven mistake-making moves through increasing levels of social visibility. Bottom rung: mispronounce a common word in low-stakes conversation. Next: intentionally give the wrong change and let someone correct you. Then: drop something in a public space and take your time retrieving it. Higher: ask a question you clearly know the answer to in a group setting. Near the top: admit to a small error at work before it's discovered. Each rung tests the same core prediction — that visible mistakes lead to negative judgment — at a progressively higher level of interpersonal risk.

The escape plan serves a specific psychological function. When people with perfectionism feel trapped in an anxious situation, their threat response escalates and the experience often reinforces the belief that mistakes are dangerous. Having a clear exit strategy — knowing you can leave, change the subject, or try again later — keeps the exercise voluntary. And voluntariness is crucial. Research on perceived control has consistently shown that people tolerate discomfort better when they believe they can stop. The brave choice isn't forcing yourself through panic. It's choosing to stay one moment longer than feels comfortable, knowing you could leave but deciding not to yet.

What Shifts Isn't the Fear, It's What the Fear Means to You

Cognitive behavioral researchers have found that behavioral experiments are among the most effective techniques for changing deeply held beliefs. The mechanism is straightforward: you make a specific prediction about what will happen, test it in the real world, then compare prediction to outcome. When the prediction fails — and in perfectionism it almost always fails — your brain has to update its model. This process is more durable than simply challenging the thought verbally, because it engages experiential learning rather than intellectual understanding alone.

Over the course of several deliberate mistakes, the change people describe isn't a disappearance of anxiety. It's a shift in interpretation. Before the experiments, the internal narrative runs: "I feel anxious, which means something bad is about to happen, which means I should avoid mistakes at all costs." After enough experiments where the predicted catastrophe didn't materialize, the narrative shifts: "I feel anxious, and based on experience, this probably won't go as badly as my brain is predicting." The anxiety remains, but its authority shrinks. It becomes a signal you can acknowledge without obeying.

This is what distinguishes deliberate mistake-making from positive self-talk or reassurance. You're not arguing with perfectionism. You're running controlled tests of its central claim and documenting the results. When you mispronounce a word and nobody flinches, that's not an opinion. It's observed reality. When you drop something and a stranger helps you pick it up with a smile, that's not wishful thinking. It's what happened. Each experiment contributes to a growing body of personal evidence your brain can reference the next time perfectionism insists that one small error will unravel everything. The courage isn't in feeling confident. It's in acting before confidence arrives.

This is educational content, not medical advice. It is not a substitute for care from a qualified professional.

Do the rep

Fear Ladder arrives in September. This article is the manual version.

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