Have you ever looked at another family and wondered what they were doing right that you somehow missed?
Maybe their children are still active in church, their family photos look perfect. Maybe they seem calm while you’re carrying questions, worry, and heartache.
Comparison has a way of sneaking into our lives when we’re already feeling vulnerable. Before long, we’re measuring our worth against someone else’s story.
If you’d rather listen to this message, you can catch the full podcast episode here:
This episode kicks off my Summer of Letting Go series, and there couldn’t be a better place to start than letting go of comparison.
Comparison Never Gives Us the Full Story
One of the biggest problems with comparison is that we rarely compare the whole picture.
We compare our hardest moments to someone else’s highlight reel. Our private struggles to what we see from the outside. Then we use that comparison as evidence that we’re failing.
For mothers of adult children, this can feel especially painful.
You might look at another family and assume they did something you didn’t. Wonder if their child stayed active in church because they were a better parent. Those thoughts can quickly turn into self-doubt.
The truth is that every family has challenges. Every child has agency. And every parent has moments they wish they could do over.
Comparison doesn’t bring clarity. It usually creates confusion.
A Tiny Hummingbird Nest Taught Me Something Important
A few years ago, a hummingbird built a nest on the light hanging outside our front door.
The nest was unbelievably small. When I looked inside and saw two tiny eggs, I couldn’t imagine how they would ever fit.
Day after day, I watched that mama hummingbird return to her nest.
Hummingbirds are known for constant movement. They dart from place to place and rarely seem to stop. Yet this little bird sat patiently on those eggs for hours at a time.
She wasn’t distracted by what other birds were doing, she wasn’t searching for a bigger nest.
I’m sure she wasn’t comparing her home to another bird’s home.
Her attention stayed focused on the job she had been given.
How much peace do we lose when we stop focusing on our own lives and start watching everyone else’s?
Letting Go of Comparison Starts with Your Attention
Whatever you focus on grows.
When you focus on what another family has, you’ll notice what your family lacks.
Or if you focus on what isn’t happening, you’ll overlook what is happening.
On the other hand, when you focus on what is working, your perspective begins to shift.
This doesn’t mean pretending everything is perfect. It simply means choosing where your attention goes.
A helpful question to ask yourself is this:
“Is what I’m thinking right now helping me?”
That question alone can stop a comparison spiral before it gains momentum.
Why Comparison Feels So Personal
Many mothers carry an invisible belief that says:
“If my child makes different choices than I hoped, it must mean I failed.”
That’s a heavy burden to carry.
It also isn’t true.
Your child’s choices are not a report card on your worth.
You can be a loving mother and still watch your child choose a different path.
You can teach, pray, guide, and support while still allowing another person the freedom to choose.
The moment we stop making our children’s choices mean something about us, we create room for more peace.
The Nest Didn't Fail
Those baby hummingbirds grew quickly.
Soon they were almost spilling out of that tiny nest.
The nest hadn’t changed, the birds had.
Then one day they left.
At first glance, someone could say the nest was empty.
The nest had done exactly what it was supposed to do.
It provided safety, shelter.
It provided a place to grow.
Then it became time for those baby birds to fly.
That idea feels especially meaningful when we think about our adult children.
Sometimes we look at where they are and wonder if we failed.
Perhaps a better question is this:
What if the nest did its job?
What if growth sometimes looks different than we expected?
What if leaving the nest isn’t evidence of failure?
What if it’s evidence that growth happened there?
A Simple Way to Let Go of Comparison
The next time comparison shows up, pause and ask yourself what you’re making it mean.
If another family’s situation makes you feel inadequate, notice the story you’re telling yourself.
Then ask whether that story is actually true.
Most of the time, you’ll discover you’ve been filling in blanks with assumptions.
That’s where peace begins to return.
You stop judging your life through someone else’s experience.
Instead, you return to your own story.
You Don't Have to Do This Alone
If comparison has been weighing you down, coaching can help.
Many of the women I work with feel stuck in cycles of guilt, worry, and self-blame. Together, we learn how to challenge those thoughts and create more peace, even when circumstances haven’t changed.
If you’d like support, I’d love to talk with you.
Your Assignment Is Enough
The mama hummingbird never needed to compare her nest to anyone else’s.
She simply stayed focused on what she had been given to do.
Letting go of comparison doesn’t mean you’ll never notice what others are doing.
It means you stop using their story to judge your own.
As you move through this Summer of Letting Go series, I hope you’ll remember this:
Your life is not happening behind schedule.
Your story is still unfolding.
And that is more than enough.
If this message resonated with you, listen to the full podcast episode and share it with a friend who may need the reminder.
And if you’re ready for more personalized support, schedule your free coaching call here: