counseling, Summit Family Therapy Dr. Courtney Stivers, PhD, LMFT counseling, Summit Family Therapy Dr. Courtney Stivers, PhD, LMFT

When Perfectionism Looks Like Strength—but Quietly Leads to Burnout

Perfectionism often looks admirable—especially in leadership.

It can look like being dependable, driven, detail‑oriented, and deeply committed to doing things “the right way.” Many of the clients we work with at Summit Family Therapy in Peoria, Illinois are high‑achieving professionals, caregivers, leaders, and helpers who pride themselves on responsibility and excellence.

And yet, many of them are also exhausted.

Perfectionism, Leadership, and Learning to Let Yourself Be Human

Perfectionism often looks admirable—especially in leadership.

It can look like being dependable, driven, detail‑oriented, and deeply committed to doing things “the right way.” Many of the clients we work with at Summit Family Therapy in Peoria, Illinois are high‑achieving professionals, caregivers, leaders, and helpers who pride themselves on responsibility and excellence.

And yet, many of them are also exhausted.

What often sits beneath that exhaustion isn’t a lack of motivation—it’s perfectionism. And while our culture frequently rewards perfectionism, both mental health research and Brené Brown’s work tell a different story: perfectionism is not the same as healthy striving—and over time, it can cost us our peace, our relationships, and our health.

What Perfectionism Really Is (and Isn’t)

Perfectionism is not about doing your best.

As researcher Brené Brown explains in The Gifts of Imperfection, perfectionism is a strategy for avoiding shame and judgment. It’s the belief that if I can be flawless, productive, or impressive enough, I can avoid criticism, rejection, or being seen as “not enough.”

In therapy, we often see perfectionism develop early—especially for people who learned that achievement, caretaking, or self‑sufficiency helped them feel safe or valued. What once worked as protection may now be driving anxiety, burnout, and chronic self‑pressure.

How Perfectionism Impacts Mental Health

At Summit Family Therapy, perfectionism commonly shows up alongside:

  • Anxiety and overthinking

  • Burnout and emotional exhaustion

  • Difficulty resting or slowing down

  • Harsh inner self‑criticism

  • Fear of making mistakes or disappointing others

  • Tying self‑worth to productivity or success

Perfectionism can keep people constantly “on,” even when they’re depleted. And because it often gets praised as dedication or competence, many people don’t realize it’s contributing to their stress until their body or mind forces them to stop.

Brené Brown reminds us that perfectionism isn’t self‑improvement—it’s shame‑based self‑protection. And shame is not a sustainable motivator.

Why Perfectionism Hits Leaders Especially Hard

Perfectionism is especially common—and especially costly—for leaders.

We see this often with:

  • Business owners and executives

  • Managers and supervisors

  • Healthcare professionals and therapists

  • Parents carrying invisible leadership roles at home

Leadership perfectionism often sounds like:

  • “Everyone is counting on me.”

  • “I can’t mess this up.”

  • “If I don’t stay on top of everything, something will fall apart.”

Over time, perfectionism in leadership can lead to:

  • Over‑functioning and micromanaging

  • Difficulty delegating or trusting others

  • Fear‑based decision‑making

  • Compassion fatigue

  • Burnout and resentment

Brené Brown describes perfectionism as armor—a way leaders try to stay in control and avoid vulnerability. While armor can feel protective, it also blocks connection, collaboration, creativity, and trust.

Healthy leadership—at work or at home—doesn’t require perfection. It requires clarity, values, and courage.

Perfectionism Isn’t the Same as Excellence

One of the biggest fears people have in therapy is:

“If I let go of perfectionism, I’ll stop caring—or my work will suffer.”

In reality, the opposite is usually true.

Letting go of perfectionism does not mean lowering your standards. It means:

  • Separating worth from performance

  • Allowing room for learning instead of constant self‑punishment

  • Choosing values over image

  • Leading from trust instead of fear

In The Gifts of Imperfection, Brené Brown calls this wholehearted living—showing up authentically, believing you are enough, and staying connected even when things are messy.

This kind of leadership creates safer workplaces, healthier families, and more resilient people.

Gentle Ways to Begin Letting Go

Here are a few small shifts we often explore with clients in therapy:

🌱 Practice “good enough”

Not every task needs excellence. Ask yourself: Does this require perfection—or progress?

🌱 Notice self‑talk after mistakes

Do you become harsh or shaming with yourself? Try replacing “I failed” with “I’m learning.”

🌱 Normalize imperfection in leadership

When leaders and parents name mistakes and repair openly, it builds trust and psychological safety.

🌱 Reconnect with your values

Perfectionism focuses on outcomes. Values ground us in what matters—integrity, kindness, connection, and presence.

Therapy for Perfectionism, Burnout, and Leadership Stress

At Summit Family Therapy, we support clients struggling with:

  • Perfectionism and anxiety

  • Burnout and work stress

  • Leadership pressure

  • High‑functioning depression

  • Shame and self‑criticism

Therapy isn’t about convincing you to care less—it’s about helping you care without destroying yourself in the process. Together, we explore where perfectionism came from, what it has protected, and how to build a healthier relationship with yourself moving forward.

You don’t have to earn your worth here. You’re allowed to be human.

Recommended Books

Brown, B. (2010). The Gifts of Imperfection: Let Go of Who You Think You’re Supposed to Be and Embrace Who You Are.
A foundational book on shame, self‑worth, and perfectionism. Brené Brown explores how perfectionism functions as armor and introduces the concept of wholehearted living—choosing authenticity, compassion, and connection over fear and performance pressure.

Brown, B. (2018). Dare to Lead.
Focused on leadership, this book expands Brown’s research into workplaces and organizations. It addresses how perfectionism, fear, and disengagement limit leadership effectiveness—and how courage, vulnerability, and values‑based leadership build trust and resilience.

Schafler, K. M. (2023). The Perfectionist’s Guide to Losing Control.
A therapist‑written, compassionate exploration of different “types” of perfectionism and how to loosen its hold without losing ambition.

Research‑Informed Articles

American Counseling Association – “Perfectionism and Its Effects on Mental Health.”
An overview of how perfectionism contributes to anxiety, depression, burnout, and chronic dissatisfaction, written for both clinicians and the public.

Hill, A. P., & Curran, T. (2016). Perfectionism and Burnout Meta‑Analysis.
Research showing that fear‑based perfectionism (not high standards themselves) is strongly linked to burnout. A key distinction for leaders and high achievers.

Liu et al. (2025). Leader Perfectionism and Team Dynamics.
Research demonstrating how leader perfectionism can increase anxiety, reduce psychological safety, and impact ethical decision‑making within teams.

Read More