
3) Comparison
The last of the three main hurdles that can cause a rift between friends is comparison.We are a generation who loves to compare. We compare everything from looks and possessions to successes and relationships. Who has the better relationship? The better job? The better house? The better clothes? Who is more popular? Who is prettier? Who is fitter? Who is funnier? Who is smarter? Who sings better? Who plays better? Who works harder? We constantly find ourselves in competition, constantly having to ramp it up because we have fallen into that trap of basing our self- esteem on being better than others or having the best things. It’s hard work and it’s exhausting. And the thing is, the second we start losing we usually find our whole life comes crashing down. And we start wanting what other people have. Jealousy is a terrible thing. It is destructive. It is stemmed from not being satisfied or grateful for what you already have, and turns into a silent resentment that starts to eat away at you. It doesn’t matter if that person is a stranger, a friend or a family member. If you start to become jealous over who they are and what they have, you stop being happy for them. You stop wanting the best for them and you start to feel negatively towards them. Jealousy and comparison don’t just have the potential to ruin our own self – esteem and happiness, but our relationships as well. It’s even worse when we compare and think we are winning. That we are better and what we have is better, because that is when pride and arrogance step in. And it is a lie. Money does not make a person better, neither do looks or possessions or status. We have not looked into the eyes of anyone who we are superior to nor inferior. We are all different and unique definitely. But we are equals. Equals who bring different things to the table rather than competitors trying to win our way there. What if I told you it didn’t have to be that way? That your life didn’t have to be one big competition all the time and you could actually just be happy? It involves having a complete change of attitude and training yourself to think about it in a different away. It involves two things.
1) Being grateful for what you have.
It can be so easy to moan about the things in your life, especially when you have got yourself in a habit of thinking negatively. But the truth is, if you have friends and family who love you, that’s precious. If you have a house, that’s a blessing. If you have a job, that’s a life saver. If you’re comparing what someone else has over you, look at what you have again and start noticing the beauty of that, because it is beautiful. What they have is different, not better. And as for possessions, possessions are luxuries, not necessities. Some people don’t have that. Some people have less than you. I know that sentence is incredibly overused but it is true. What’s ironic is in my experience, I usually find it’s the people who have less who are happier because they understand what’s important in life. The times in my life where I have been most happy is when I’ve gone camping with my friends, simply because you don’t take any of your possessions with you. It doesn’t matter about money and it doesn’t matter what you wear or how you look. You’re camping! You’re all in the same boat. You can’t be on your phone all the time or watch TV. You have each other and you start to interact with people again and talk and play games, rather than staring absentmindedly at your phone or hiding in the four walls of your home. It starts to bring a bit of equality back into life. You get to know people properly and realise how great they are and remember what truly matters in life. You stop worrying about what people are thinking about you and letting that get in the way of actually getting closer to them. You become grateful for them and what they bring to your life rather than all the rest of it. And you start caring about them rather than competing with them. Although we can’t always go camping, we can start remembering who we have in our lives and making time for them. There is a phrase that says, the best things in life are free. People are amazing and you don’t have to buy them. It’s time we started appreciating them again.
Sometimes, it can be as simple as appreciating creation around you. Nature is beautiful. When was the last time you stopped to appreciate it?

And when it comes to your comparing your talents and what you love doing, remember that it doesn’t matter if people are better than you or worse than you. It’s simply about doing what you love because you love it and it makes you happy. If you have something that you love that makes you happy, you should be grateful for that gift in your life. Because some people don’t think they are good at anything or enjoy doing anything. (Which isn’t true by the way. And as a side note, sometimes the question isn’t “What am I good at?” but “What do I enjoy?” Everyone enjoys doing something. You just have to find it.) It isn’t about skill. It’s about willingness. And if you want to be better, practice! Focus on where you are at and where you want to be, not anyone else. They may be good, but they are different. You are different. You bring something different to the table. I have a very good friend who has an amazing phrase that we’ve all started to live by. He says, “You be you.” I love it. It’s so simple. Don’t try to be anyone else but be the best version of you. No one can be you. You are you and they are them. As a Christian, I believe God created you the way you are for a reason, and you were created to be loved by him. That is your purpose, and that is why you will always be enough.
So if you are struggling with comparison, maybe write down – or at least start thinking about – what you actually have in your life to be grateful for. And I’ll be honest, it isn’t a quick fix. Like I said at the beginning, you have to train yourself to think like this. It’s like athletes who have to train to be good enough for competitions. It takes time and you have to do it over and over. But if you consistently train yourself to be grateful for things in your life and think positively about what you have, it will become gradually more natural to you, and you will have an appreciation of life that you didn’t have before. The difference a positive attitude can make to your life is enormous. It’s hard but it’s worth it.
2) Preferring others.
Naturally we think of ourselves. Our needs, our wants and our desires. And this is where comparison thrives because we are all looking out for number one and nobody can get in the way of that. But if we were to stop looking inwardly at ourselves and what we can gain for one moment, and start to look outwardly at others and have their best interests at heart, comparison finally gives way to something else. Love and joy. When we start caring more about what other people have and put their needs and feelings before our own, our whole perspective shifts. Instead of thinking, “Why them?” we train ourselves to be happy for what they have because we love them, and we want the best for them. We want them to be happy. When we realise it’s not just about us, that starts to affect our own feelings about ourselves. It feels good to love other people. We were created to do it. It’s not about winning or being better. It’s about wanting the best for each other. Loving each other extravagantly. It doesn’t matter if this person keeps getting more opportunities than us. Good for them! They’re happy and that’s a great thing. Celebrate with them. And one day an opportunity will come to you, and you will have one more person cheering in your corner. One example I could give is how much I love my sister. Now in the world’s eyes she has a better job than me and a bigger house than me and has seen more of the world than I have. But I can genuinely say that not once have I been jealous of her. She’s done well in her life, and she’s worked hard to get there. Plus I’m very grateful for the job I have and the house I live in. They’re blessings to me. Bigger isn’t better to me, and money doesn’t buy my happiness. But seeing my sister content, that does make me happy. And even if my sister were to win the lottery and have more opportunities in life than me, and have more friends than me and go on more holidays than me, I would be overjoyed for her. Because I love her, and I want her to have the best life. Another example is a girl I used to find myself competing with when it came to our friends. If she hung out with people more than me or got invited to places I didn’t I hated it. Likewise, if I got to hang out and she didn’t, I felt very smug. But over the years as I have been learning about preferring others, I came to realise that she wasn’t better than me. And I wasn’t better than her. We were different, and our friends loved us equally for different reasons. It was okay that people wanted to hang out with her, because actually she was my friend. I should want her to be loved and have the best friendships that she could. So I changed my attitude and started training myself to be happy for her, that she had people in her life to support and love her, myself included. Not only did it do wonders for our friendship, it did wonders for my self-esteem too. The thing is, our self- esteem shouldn’t be based on others or on things. We should be more concerned on who we are as people.
If we can start to train ourselves to prefer others and appreciate what we have in our own lives, comparison dies and suddenly we start to look out for each other instead. Our relationships start to flourish. We start to realise the beauty of everyone bringing something different to the table, and realise our own self-worth as well. We realise that they are not better and we are not better, but that we are all of equal worth. The world would be a happier place if we started to look at everyone that way.
“Comparison is the thief of joy.”
Theodore Roosevelt
“Don’t just pretend to love others. Really love them.
Romans 12:9 – The Bible
“Don’t act out of selfish ambition or be conceited. Instead, humbly think of others as being better than yourselves.
Philippians 2:3 – The Bible
“In all things, give thanks.”
1 Thessalonians 5:18 – The Bible
“Every good and perfect gift is from above, coming down from the Father.”
James 1:17 – The Bible


