At that moment, I felt like I was looking at myself.
Of course, she feels all of this much more intensely than I did at her age, and I don’t know how teenagers could cope with it when their brains aren’t even fully developed yet. The constant bombardment with images of perfection brought in instantly by social media would put any rational, intelligent human being into a downward spiral of hopelessness.
I looked at Allie, who was so full of suppressed rage, and put my hand on her arm. With earnest tenderness, I quoted 2 Nephi 2:25 from The Book of Mormon. “‘Adam fell that men might be; and men are, that they might have joy.’ Joy, Allie. You are here to have joy!” The way she has been living has brought her anything but joy. Trying to be everything and do everything, leaves her always behind, always trying to catch-up. Yet when she stops to catch her breath, she falls further behind. She constantly feels defeated, at times wanting to give up, and at others using the false narrative of the plausibility of perfection to motivate her.
As the years have gone by, I have tried to become more and more comfortable in my own imperfection. I still struggle, and the messages that I should be able to capably and competently “do it all” still eat at me, but I am continually learning that I have limits. There are some things I just can’t do yet, and that is okay. Actually, it’s more than okay. It’s good-- great, even! It means that I am blessed enough to be living the human experience, in all its messy, imperfect glory. It means that I am learning everyday, and coming to know my Father in Heaven. It means that I have to rely on the merits and mercy and grace of my Savior Jesus Christ, because He is the only one worthy to bear my burdens and weaknesses.
Philippians 4:13 says “I can do all things through Christ which strengtheneth me.” That absolutely does not mean that Jesus will magically turn us into Captain Marvel-- invincible and all-powerful. It does mean that because of the Atonement that He suffered, because of His infinite love for me, He can strengthen me through my trials, comfort me in my suffering, and fortify my faith to carry on with courage in the face of opposition.
The beauty of Christ’s Atonement is that it not only cleanses and purifies us and makes our own resurrection possible so that we can one day stand in the presence of our glorified Father in Heaven, but it can work in us now, everyday. We can find strength in and through Christ, and this is what allows us to feel real joy, real hope. Right now.
Joy and hope are not found in seeking perfection here in mortality. They are found as we master the art of embracing our own imperfections and limitations as humans, while recognizing our eternal potential as eternal children of a loving God, and looking to Jesus to make up for everything that we lack. This is humility.
The world wants us to believe we are all racing toward its own defined image of perfection, and the messages are coming from everywhere-- media, school, and (sadly) even church sometimes, from well-meaning but misguided brothers and sisters. It’s constant, unrelenting. But the race is really an illusion, as we find ourselves exhausted, spinning in a hamster wheel, going nowhere.
Adam fell that men might be; and men are, that they might have joy. That is why we are here. To experience joy, even in opposition. To feel peace, even amidst chaos. To see hope, even in despair. And to come to know God’s perfect love for us, in all our imperfections.
And none of that is found in that ridiculous hamster wheel.




