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Why perfectionism makes people fall for religious schemes

Perfectionism isn’t about wanting to be good.

It’s about being afraid to admit ‘bad’ or uncomfortable feelings.

Ego feelings like:

1. jealousy

2. wanting attention

3. feeling better than others

4. feeling unimportant or confused

For a perfectionist, these feelings feel dangerous. Not because they’re evil, but because the person thinks:

“If I feel this, something is wrong with me.”

So instead of dealing with the feeling inside through practicing self-compassion, gratitude, or healthy boundaries,

they try to manage how they look on the outside.

How shame fits into this. Healthy shame isn’t about feeling bad forever.

It’s the feeling that says:

“I’m not perfect, and that’s okay.”

When shame can turn into humility, a person can:

1. admit mistakes

2. learn from them

3. stay connected to others

Perfectionism blocks this. Instead of letting shame turn into connection, it makes shame feel dangerous.

So the person thinks:

“If I admit this, I’ll fall apart or lose respect.”

That’s why perfectionism protects image instead of growing humility.

What narcissism really is.

The word narcissism upsets people, but here’s what it means in simple terms:

Narcissism is a kind of perfectionism. It’s what happens when someone feels they must always see themselves as good, special, or right, because feeling imperfect feels too hard.

So they protect a perfect image of themselves. That’s why narcissism can look like confidence or certainty.

Underneath, it’s fear of saying: “I don’t feel okay inside.”

Why praise becomes so important

When someone doesn’t feel good about themselves on the inside, they need others to tell them they’re good.

Praise isn’t just nice. It feels necessary. It helps them feel steady for a moment.

That’s why they may:

1. need compliments

2. need to feel admired

3. need to be seen as right

4. struggle with criticism

Not because they truly believe they’re better, but because they’re not sure they’re good at all.

Where religious schemes come in Healthy religion helps people become more honest and responsible. Religious schemes do the opposite.

They say:

“If you follow the rules and believe the right things, you are good.”

This feels safe to perfectionism because:

1. you don’t have to look inside

2. you don’t have to admit hard feelings

3. you just have to appear to behave the right way

You don’t have to say:

“I felt jealous.”

“I wanted attention.”

“I felt insecure.”

You just have to look holy. The biggest problem You can’t fix what you won’t admit. Real growth means being able to say:

“I messed up.”

“I felt something unfair”

“I wasn’t proud of myself.”

If a system makes those things feel dangerous to admit, people stop growing. They learn how to look good instead of becoming real.

Why this turns harmful over time Because the insecurity never gets healed, the system starts needing:

• more praise, validation

• more rules

• more judging of others

Not because people are bad. Because they’re scared to look inside. The difference between real faith and fake systems. Real faith doesn’t make you perfect. It helps you be honest without falling apart. It makes it safe to be human.

Schemes protect image, not truth. And perfectionism will always choose looking good, until it feels safe to be real.

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