Tonight a cookie friend texted me and asked, "Do you ever struggle with the feeling of inadequacy with your cookies?" I thought on that question for a quick second and immediately answered, "NO!" Trust me, it isn't because I feel like my cookies are SO amazing, not at all! Two years ago, I was finding myself patrolling social media looking at all the amazing cookie pictures and then criticizing my own cookies. I was stuck in a perpetual cycle of comparison. Sadly, rather than it improving my techniques or my quality...it stole my joy. I was comparing everything about my cookies to others and I suddenly forgot why I loved doing cookies. I let comparison steal my joy.
Do you do that? It took me a while to realize that I was even doing it! Then, I went through a phase of not following my fellow cookiers. I needed to focus on ME. I needed to find who I was as a cookier rather than trying to be anyone else. It's amazing the transformation that occurred. I stopped searching on Pinterest for "cookie" ideas. I stopped looking on social media at other cookie posts and I started working on me. I even started sketching my sets out and brainstorming for myself. I had to experiment and play with icing. I needed to tweak and alter my dough flavorings. I started trying different methods and finding what works for me. I began a journey of staying in my own lane. I realized a very important lesson, "Don't allow comparison to steal your joy. "
Do you do that? It took me a while to realize that I was even doing it! Then, I went through a phase of not following my fellow cookiers. I needed to focus on ME. I needed to find who I was as a cookier rather than trying to be anyone else. It's amazing the transformation that occurred. I stopped searching on Pinterest for "cookie" ideas. I stopped looking on social media at other cookie posts and I started working on me. I even started sketching my sets out and brainstorming for myself. I had to experiment and play with icing. I needed to tweak and alter my dough flavorings. I started trying different methods and finding what works for me. I began a journey of staying in my own lane. I realized a very important lesson, "Don't allow comparison to steal your joy. "