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Monday, January 20, 2014

PERFECTIONISM - PART ONE

Pitfalls of Perfectionism


You could say that perfectionism is a crime against humanity. Adaptability is the characteristic that enables the species to survive—and if there's one thing perfectionism does, it rigidifies behavior. It constricts people just when the fast-moving world requires more flexibility and comfort with ambiguity than ever. It turns people into success slaves.Perfectionists, experts now know, are made and not born, commonly at an early age. They also know that perfectionism is increasing. One reason: Pressure on children to achieve is rampant, because parents now seek much of their status from the performance of their kids. And, by itself, pressure to achieve is perceived by kids as criticism for mistakes; criticism turns out to be implicit in it. Perfectionism, too, is a form of parental control, and parental control of offspring is greater than ever in the new economy and global marketplace, realities that are deeply unsettling to today's adults.
"I don't understand it," one bewildered student told me, speaking for the five others seated around the table during lunch at a small residential college in the Northeast. "My parents were perfectly happy to get Bs and Cs when they were in college. But they expect me to get As." The others nodded in agreement. Today's hothouse parents are not only over-involved in their children's lives, they demand perfection from them in school.
And if ever there was a blueprint for breeding psychological distress, that's it. Perfectionism seeps into the psyche and creates a pervasive personality style. It keeps people from engaging in challenging experiences; they don't get to discover what they truly like or to create their own identities. Perfectionism reduces playfulness and the assimilation of knowledge; if you're always focused on your own performance and on defending yourself, you can't focus on learning a task. Here's the cosmic thigh-slapper: Because it lowers the ability to take risks, perfectionism reduces creativity and innovation—exactly what's not adaptive in the global marketplace.
Yet, it does more. It is a steady source of negative emotions; rather than reaching toward something positive, those in its grip are focused on the very thing they most want to avoid—negative evaluation. Perfectionism, then, is an endless report card; it keeps people completely self-absorbed, engaged in perpetual self-evaluation—reaping relentless frustration and doomed to anxiety and depression.
No one knows this better than psychologist Randy O. Frost, a professor at Smith College. His research over the past two decades has helped define the dimensions of perfectionism. This, he's found, is what perfectionism sounds like:
"If someone does a task at work or school better than me, then I feel like I failed the whole task."
"Other people seem to accept lower standards from themselves than I do."
"My parents want me to be the best at everything."
"As a child, I was punished for doing things imperfectly."
"I tend to get behind in my work because I repeat things over and over."
"Neatness is very important to me."
Each statement captures a facet of perfectionism:
Concern over mistakes: Perfectionists tend to interpret mistakes as equivalent to failure and to believe they will lose the respect of others following failure.
High personal standards: Perfectionists don't just set very high standards but place excessive importance on those standards for self-evaluation.
Parental expectations: Perfectionists tend to believe their parents set very high goals for them.
Parental criticism: Perfectionists perceive that their parents are (or were) overly critical.
Doubting actions: Perfectionists doubt their ability to accomplish tasks.
Organization: Perfectionists tend to emphasize order.
By itself, having high standards (or being orderly) does not impale a person on perfectionism; it is necessary, but not sufficient. "Most people who are successful set very high standards for themselves," observes Frost. "They tend to be happy." What turns life into the punishing pursuit of perfection is the extent to which people are worried about mistakes.Concern with mistakes and doubts about actions are absolute prerequisites for perfectionism. Perfectionists fear that a mistake will lead others to think badly of them; the performance aspect is intrinsic to their view of themselves. They are haunted by uncertainty whenever they complete a task, which makes them reluctant to consider something finished. "People may not necessarily believe they made a mistake," explains Frost, "they're just not quite sure; they doubt the quality of their actions." Intolerance for uncertainty characterizes obsessive compulsive disorder and generalized anxiety disorder, too.
But it's only paralyzing in the presence of parental criticism and exacting expectations. It's one thing to strive for perfection, another to demand it. "Overly demanding and critical parents put a lot of pressure on kids to achieve," says Frost. "Our studies show that is associated with perfectionism." It's transmitted in subtle ways. There's a modeling effect, so that parents who are obsessively concerned with mistakes raise children who are, too. And there's an interpersonal effect, transmitted by an authority figure in a child's life who is overly critical and demanding.
Concern with mistakes is a reflection of what Frost calls the core issue in perfectionism, the unspoken belief or doubt that arises in a child's mind: "I'm incompetent or unworthy." It leads to hypercriticalness and the rigid adherence to strict standards of performance under all conditions. It is the element of perfectionism most linked to psychopathology. And it comes about because a child has been made to feel that approval is contingent on performance.
The conditionality of love doesn't have to be stated. It can be communicated in simply "the way the whole environment is structured," says Frost. "If the parent is enthusiastic only when the child accomplishes something or spends a lot of time working at something, then it's unspoken yet demonstrated by the environment."
Pushing for perfection clashes with children's developmental needs. If a child's sense of self comes to rest on accomplishments, they buy into the idea that they're only as good as they achieve. Driven from within to reach that impossible ideal, perfection, they become compliant and self-focused.
"There's a difference between excellence and perfection," explains Miriam Adderholdt, a psychology instructor at Davidson Community College in Lexington, North Carolina, and author of Perfectionism: What's Bad About Being Too Good? Excellence involves enjoying what you're doing, feeling good about what you've learned, and developing confidence. Perfection involves feeling bad about a 98 and always finding mistakes no matter how well you're doing. A child makes all As and one B. All it takes is a parent raising an eyebrow for the child to get the message.
The truly subversive aspect of perfectionism, however, is that it leads people to conceal their mistakes. Unfortunately, that strategy prevents a person from getting crucial feedback—feedback that both confirms the value of mistakes and affirms self-worth—leaving no way to counter the belief that worth hinges on performing perfectly. The desire to conceal mistakes eventually forces people to avoid situations in which they are mistake-prone—often seen in athletes who reach a certain level of performance and then abandon the sport altogether.
Frost also looked at writing ability in college students. "We found that those with great concern over mistakes did poorly on a writing test. People learn to write by showing their work to others and having it critiqued. Perfectionists avoid having their writing evaluated. They avoid courses that require sharing their writing . They don't develop their writing skills because they don't put themselves in the right environment." The pressures of perfectionism similarly keep people from developing social skills and emotion-regulation skills that would help them cope in life.
Perfectionism is self-defeating in still other ways. The incessant worry about mistakes actually undermines performance. Canadian psychologists Gordon L. Flett and Paul L. Hewitt studied the debilitating effects on athletes of anxiety over perfect performance. They uncovered "the perfection paradox." "Even though certain sports require athletes to achieve perfect performance outcomes, the tendency to be cognitively preoccupied with the attainment of perfection often undermines performance." Overconcern about mistakes orients them to failure.
Preoccupation with perfection also undermines performance in cognitively based academic pursuits such as math—especially among the best students, those who have superior working-memory capacity. Such students are most apt to choke under pressure, which selectively erodes their memory capacity.

Emote Control

In the grand scheme of things, perfectionism is an intrusive form of parenting that attempts to control the psychological world of the child. But where does psychological control come from? At the Catholic University of Leuven in Belgium, developmental psychologist Luc Goossens and colleagues have identified two distinct sources of psychological control.
One is the parents' own perfectionism, an excessive concern with mistakes. Parents approve of their children only when high standards are met. Using covert, indirect techniques—a sigh, a strategic silence, the raised eyebrow—perfectionist parents apply their psychological control on the children, who then become self-critical.
Another source of control is parents' separation anxiety. The adults are overly attached to their kids and anxious about their growing autonomy ; a child's continued development poses the threat of emotional loss and abandonment to the parent. Such parents guilt-trip their kids, approving of their behavior only when the children remain close and dependent on them. Parents tend to resort to keeping their children dependent when their own adult relationships are less than fulfilling.
Whether stirred by fear of loss or a need for status, parents who employ psychological control focus primarily on their own personal needs, not their children's developmental needs.
Suniya Luthar was not at all prepared for the discovery she made about the modern pressures on kids. Children of upper-class, highly educated parents, she explained in a 2005 article, "Children of the Affluent," experience just as many problems as inner-city kids—and in some cases, more. Luthar tracked the source of their problems. First and foremost are achievement pressures. "Children with very high perfectionistic strivings—those who saw achievement failures as personal failures—had relatively high depression, anxiety, and substance use, as did those who indicated their parents overemphasized their accomplishments, valuing them disproportionately more than their personal character."
Here is the key point: Among the young, high pressure for achievement is ipso facto experienced as parental criticism. Children come to feel that their failure to accomplish will seriously diminish the affection, regard, and esteem with which their parents view them as individuals.
The push for perfection comes at a high cost to children. But the biggest problem with perfection may be that it masks the real secret of success in life. Success hinges less on getting everything right than on how you handle getting things wrong. This is where creativity, passion, and perseverance come into play. In a flat world, you don't make people powerful by pushing them to be perfect but by allowing them to become passionate about something that compels their interest.
Ironically, it could be that children of working-class immigrants to the U.S.—one of five children in 2006—are really in the most privileged position. With parents who speak little English and lack the know-how to manipulate the system on their behalf, they have no one to run interference for them, no one to clean up a mess in their wake. They are forced to learn to bring in their homework and handle life on their own.
On an airline flight, I was seated next to a woman who is a vice president of a major investment group. She comes in regular contact with young people. She confided that she hires only children of first-generation immigrants. They are resourceful, hardworking, good at problem solving. The "fancy kids," she says, are not persevering, not willing to work hard, not clever at problem solving, not resourceful. The kids she hires whose parents didn't speak English well had to learn to figure out things for themselves; they couldn't rely on their parents. Their "disadvantage" wound up making them stronger.
To consign children to the pursuit of perfection is to trap them in an illusion. Like the anorexic literally dying to be thin, perfectionism consumes more and more of the self. Among the many paradoxes of perfectionism is yet one more: It is ultimately self-destructive to devote all one's psychic resources to oneself.—Hara Estroff Marano

How to Criticize

The big element influencing perception of parental relationships is criticism. Criticism implying that affection or approval is conditional on good performance is lethal. What's destructive is the actual or threatened withdrawal of affection or approval: the expression of anger when he gets something wrong or disappoints, even a sigh or sounds of exasperation, irritation, or annoyance.
  • Never tell kids that second best is not good enough. If you feel disappointment in a child's performance, use it constructively. Ask her to evaluate her performance. "Are you happy with it?" "Why?" "What did you get out of it?" Ask: "What would you do differently next time?"
  • Ask a child what he needs in order to do as well as he wants. Maybe your child needs more sleep or to learn how to prioritize.
  • Offer support verbally and nonverbally. Empathize with the child: "This stuff is hard, isn't it?"
  • If a child leaves her homework for the last minute and consequently doesn't do well on a test, don't put the knife in with "I told you so." Instead, capitalize on her own disappointment. "You're not happy with the way things turned out, are you?" Ask: "What can you do next time to make it come out the way you want?"

How to Give Praise

Praise given the wrong way can reinforce the need to be perfect.
  • Reward the process and the effort, not the talent or the product. Shifting focus to effort illuminates the key to mastery.
  • When a child gets a great grade on a paper, resist the urge to say: "You're brilliant." Instead say: "You're a really good thinker." Be specific: "It's great that you connected X to Y." Or ask a question that focuses attention on the thinking: "What got you interested in this?" If you praise kids' intelligence and then they fail at something, they think they're not smart anymore, and they lose interest in work. But kids praised for effort get energized in the face of difficulty.
  • Praising effort also gives kids (and adults) the keys to their own mental health. The brain is built so that it generates positive mood states—and subdues negative ones—as it works hard toward a meaningful goal.
  • Do not supply material rewards for achievement. Instead, congratulate your kid. Ask why things worked out so well and what your child attributes her success to. You want kids to understand exactly which efforts pay off in which situations. Supplying external rewards kills internal motivation and turns an activity into inspiration-crushing work.

Letting Go is Hard to Do

Perfectionists fear that if they give up perfectionism, they won't be good anymore at anything; they'll fall apart. In fact, perfectionism harms performance more than it helps. The worst thing about it, says Randy Frost, is the belief that self-worth is contingent on performance—that if you don't do well, you're worthless. It's possible to escape that thinking.
  • First, watch a movie or a sunset or engage in some activity not affected by your perfectionistic strivings. Pay attention to how much pleasure you get from it.
  • Then engage in some activity—say, tennis—that is subject to your perfectionism. How much pleasure do you get from it?
  • Ask yourself: So I miss a shot, what does it mean for my self-worth?
  • Apply that same insight to all other activities: Is this perfectionistic orientation worth it for this task?
  • Now you actually need to experiment with a different way of evaluating yourself and your performance. So deliberately make a mistake; miss a shot in tennis.
  • Ask yourself: Does your opponent think less of you? Do observers think less of you? If your opponent makes a mistake, do you think less of him?
  • Play tennis and concentrate only on the motion of your body. Did you enjoy that set more?
  • Understand the nature of mistakes. They're something we learn from—more than from our successes.
  • Look upon failure as information, not a fixed or frozen outcome. It's a signal to try something else—another chance to learn.
From A Nation of Wimps by Hara Estroff Marano (Broadway Books, 2008), reprinted with permission.

Penulis sedang dalam proses menterjemahkankan artikel ini kedalam bahasa Melayu untuk paparan semua.

Saturday, January 18, 2014

PINTU REZEKI.....SAMBUT TAHUN BARU 1435 HIJRI

Pintu REZEKI


Assalamualaikum wbt..

Alhamdulillah syukur ke hadart Ilahi kerana kita masih diberi peluang untuk berkongsi idea dalam laman blogger ini.

Terima kasih juga kepada rakan-rakan bloger yang sudi mengunjungi dan meninggalkan pesanan yang membina.

Alhamdulillah. kali ni saya ingin berkongsi satu topik yang amat penting kepada kita semua.

~~ INSYAALLAH~~

Terdapat "8 PINTU MURAH REZEKI" ialah:

1. Jangan Derhaka dengan Ibu Bapa.
2. Jangan Bergaduh dengan Saudara Mara.
3. “Tidak akan papa kedana orang yang pergi menunaikan haji..”
4. Sentiasa sembahyang sunat Dhuha.
5. Jangan tidur selepas solat subuh.
6. Selalu baca doa Al-Waqiah.
7. Rezeki ada dalam perkahwinan.
8. Rezeki ada pada anak “Semasa bayi itu lahir, 4 perkara ditetapkan antaranya ialah rezeki dan rezeki anak itu juga akan turun kepada ibu bapanya.

Mudah-mudahan ia bermanfaat kepada kita semua.

Yang baik datangnya dari Allah dan yang lemah atas diri saya sendiri.

Wallahualam.

Saturday, January 4, 2014

SELAMAT MEYAMBUT TAHUN BARU 2014- SEMOGA KITA ORANG MELAYU TIDAK DITIPU LAGI...

Salam semua,

Penulis rasa malas sikit nak tekan butang laptop diawal tahun baru 2014 ni. Ada banyak yang tak kena sampai peringkat seriuos pun ada.  Macam-macam berita yang kita dengar dalam tv, akhbar, blog, fb dan....macam-macam, tapi rasa tak teringin pun nak komen kecuali tentang nasib orang Melayu di negeri sendiri.

Posting kali ni biarlah berbaloi... pinjam orang punya pun takpa ( dengan izin oii ) asalkan orang kampung tak kena tipu..

Sambutan tahun baru 2014 sungguh hebat. dengan pancutan bunga api yang berharga bermilion2 ringgit, jamuan besar besaran untuk " declare " tahun visit Malaysia 2014. ( Betul la pelancung bawa diut masuk..tapi sapa yang dok dapat... Melayu... heheh.. jadi tukang bawa pelancung dah lumayan. )  Belanja  tetap belanja, besar kecik tok sah kira, asalkan belanja... Bila rakyat bising ( Bukan orang PKR saja yang bising orang BN pun banyak dah bersuara tentang susah nak hidup di bumi bertuah ni...!! ( dah tak bertuah lagi dah..) Lepas berbelanja nanti kita umumkan lah cost saving plan..saperti yang di umumkan oleh PM.

PATI lebih senang dan mewah tinggal di Malaysia, boleh berniaga, boleh mandu teksi, boleh jadi kontraktor katering boleh kawin dengan orang tempatan ( Melayu la siapa lagi.. ) dan macam-macam boleh. Anak tempatan ??  ( Melayu la siapa lagi.. )... merempat dan terus merempat. Nak berniaga pasar malam pun kena kelentong  oleh pegawai-pegawai kerajaan.

Bagi pegawai tinggi kerajaan pulak, orang pakai merz kita pun nak kena pakai merz jugak. Mak datin pulak  macam mana, nak pakai apa , sekurang-kurangnya  BMW 3S.. sudah lah beb.. yang jenama lain tak main la.... Anak pulak yang baru tahun dua/tiga dalam U pun tak nak pakai kereta jugak kah?....ok lah untuk u all  daddy bagi Honda City.. cukop ka.. Habis tu matainance macam mana pulak...jangan bimbang ada sponsor punya...        ( bukan nak tuduh menudoh tetapi inilah realitinya. )

Kesian kat orang kampong kerja buat macam mana pun pendapatan dok takok tu jugak.. harap duit BRIM  650 setahun ( 55.00 sebulan ) boleh buat pa... sekurang-kurangnya boleh jugak menabung dalam tabung haji... kau tunggulah beb kalau menabung sekarang tahun 2054 baru kau boleh naik haji itu pun kalau tak kojol. So, Melayu kenalah cari sumber rezeki yang lain... mintak ( doa)  dengan tuhan.. Insya'Allah tuhan makbulkan, tapi jangan dok saja..kenalah rajin bekerja.

Sunday, January 5, 2014

Cost Saving : JJ & Putrajaya Morons Insulting Our Intelligence Again

I have been informed by a big name UMNO Blogger that those 11 cost saving measures announced by the PM recently were cooked up by the same morons Jamaludin Jarjis, Idris Jala, Omar Ong and Dato Alice something (in the PMO).


I have not said anything about those 11 cost saving measures. I have been hearing quite a lot from other gomen people as well about those measures.  That does not mean I dont have anything to say. Just waiting for the right time. Here it is.
To be accurate (muahaha) first here is Bernama. You can read the full Bernama report yourself :


Dec 30 (Bernama) -- Najib Tun Razak Monday announced 11 measures to slash public sector expenditure beginning Jan 1, 2014
  1. reduction by 10% entertainment allowance for ministers/ dep. ministers.
  2. 5%-10% reduce entertainment allowance of Jusa C Grade and above 
  3. toll facility for senior govt officers reduced RM50/RM100 or 30% 
  4. Jusa C Grade & below only eligible for economy class 
  5. reduce by 5% electricity cost at all government premises
  6. freeze fresh application renovation of government offices 
  7. optimising existing office space to reduce rental 
  8. tighten appointment of consultants including conducting of feasibility studies
  9. cut down event management companies 
  10. door gifts or souvenirs during government conferences or events 
  11. reduce food & drinks, buntings & banners (at) official government functions
  12. use government-owned training institutions for organising courses, seminars 
-- BERNAMA

Hey that is 12, not 11. Whatever. Here is the PM himself :


OK folks this is my feeling. Here is what will likely happen. You may agree or not agree :

1. reduction by 10% entertainment allowance for ministers/ dep. ministers - This is a joke. The Billionaire's Club does not need entertainment allowance at all. If they want to they can karaoke, sing, dance, belanja to their hearts content. I know only one or two ministers who really need an entertainment allowance.
2. 5%-10% reduce entertainment allowance of Jusa C Grade and above - their corporate friends will have to belanja more. Apa susah sangat?

3. toll facility for senior govt officers reduced RM50 - RM100 or 30% 
4. Jusa C Grade & below only eligible for economy class 

Wow!! This will save the gomen RM100 per Jusa C. And economy flights only - on domestic. Just how many Jusa C are there? 100? 1000? 10,000? So how many million rupiah will this save the gomen?

5. reduce by 5% electricity cost at all government premises

This one is just pulling the wool. How do you save 5%? Turn off lights in the toilets? Turn down the aircond? Do read on.

6. freeze fresh application renovation of government offices 

I think they will still renovate. But they will say, 'this renovation was approved BEFORE Najib's announcement.' And it will go on for the next four years.

7. optimising existing office space to reduce rental 

They dont even know what this means. I have a suggestion - pejabat Menteri pindah saja ke kandang monyet  di Zoo Negara. That will save some space. How about that? Boleh jimat makanan sekali. 

8. tighten appointment of consultants including conducting of feasibility studies

Ini membohong. What about the RM600 Million for Idris Jala's Pemandul? Will that RM600 Million be cancelled? Will Pemandul be unwound? No? Then why lie to the people?

Why is it that until today Idris Jala refuses to divulge to the Malaysian public how much money Pemandul has paid in consultancy fees to the consultants for the past five years since 2009? Why is it such a big secret? What does Idris Jala have to hide?

If Idris Jala cannot divulge even basic information like this then how is the public to know how much "less" money the gomen will pay the consultants? Jangan cakap kosong.

9. cut down event management companies 

This one I have solid evidence. The Dataran Merdeka is closed today - again. Something about Visit Malaysia Year 2014. This time for three days. It causes traffic jams and costs the economy millions in lost man hours. We came to work late this morning. Jalan semua tutup.  

So who is the event management company? Crony ke? How much was paid? Apa pasal tak cancel event? Or move it to Putrajaya or Taman Tasik Titiwangsa where there will be least disruptions to the public? When are the morons going to realise that KL City Centre is NOT the place to host events. So please jangan bohong pasal "cut down event management companies" ok.

10. door gifts or souvenirs during government conferences or events 

This is too stupid to even talk about. Yes it will save money. But how many millions? You mean the gomen has been giving out RM100 million in door gifts every year? (Alamak - unless it really is RM100 million.)

11. reduce food &  drinks, buntings & banners (at) official government functions

This is what those four morons can come up with? Jusa C and above get one karipap, below Jusa C get two karipap. Gred 55 and below get nasi lemak bungkus. How many hundred million Ringgit will this save the gomen and the economy?

12. use government-owned training institutions for organising courses, seminars

Here is how they will overcome this "problem". They will still use five star hotels, convention centres and such under any number of excuses. Too many people, we need audio visual facilities, we need broadcast facilities, we need more powerful aircond etc etc. Plus they will give the "discretion" to the Ketua Pengarah, the DG etc to waive the 'restrictions'. There will be a waiver almost every day. It will be back to square one. Ini semua cakap klentong saja.

And folks - I have a question. How will you (the member of the public) know that these &^%$$#s are not pulling a nother fast one? Has anyone thought about this? 

For example - have they informed the public what exactly is the gomen's annual electricity bill RIGHT NOW? No they have not. So even if they save 5%, increase 5% or increase 10% how will you know? 5% less from what figure? 

Is the gomen going to  make an announcement say in June 2014 that says 'So far for the first six months of 2014 our electricity bill is RMx.y Billion. This is a 5% savings on the RMx.z Billion we spent for the same period in 2013'.

Even then how will you know that they will not give you an inflated figure. Then after one year show you another  "feel good" figure and then declare 'See we have saved 5%'? 

How will you know? Who is going to monitor them? How will we know if they are telling the truth? Ponder this : do you trust this guy ?



They are just making fun of you and me. At the very best they are being childish. Not being serious at all. 

They understand very well that in Malaysia no one reads much, there is little or no critical analyses or critical thinking. They know this extremely very well. So they just  "memperbodohkan orang". Make fools of you and me.

Kalau betul nak cut cost - then reduce the number of Ministries. India has 1.4 Billion population. There are only about 24 Cabinet Ministers. Malaysia has 28 million people. Najib has about 40 Ministers. Belum kira Deputy Ministers. The Education Ministry has THREE deputy Ministers. Even  'Tulang Belakang Lembu' has Minister status.

The largest economy in the world the USA has less than 1.0 million Civil Servants. We have 1.4 million. Plus the GLCs, the gomen employs close to 2.0 million people. 

Now there is some bickering about the PM's jetplanes. The PM has about eight or nine jetplanes at his disposal. Two full size jetplanes and six or seven smaller ones. Why so many? 

Why do we need an office of the First Lady in the PM's Office? Never before has there been such a thing as a First Lady and with an office in the PMO. Can we shut down that FLOP's (First Lady of Putrajaya) office completely? It might save us RM100 million or more a year. 

These 11 cost saving measures do not amount to anything. The gomen budget for 2014 is about RM265 billion. These measures will not even save RM1.0 billion (one third of 1%).  

So the "Four Morons of the Apocalypse" are just pulling our legs. They are making fun of the people.