📖 Reading 6.2: Ministry Sciences: Perfectionism, Comparison, and Social Media
(Practical Formation for Competitive Souls | Policy-Aware Chaplain Tools)

Learning Goals

By the end of this reading, you should be able to:

  • Identify common forms of perfectionism and comparison in athletes, coaches, and sports staff.
  • Explain how social media amplifies pressure, shame cycles, and performance-identity.
  • Use practical, non-clinical chaplain tools to reduce anxiety and increase steadiness.
  • Practice “in-lane” referral readiness without acting as a therapist, trainer, or compliance officer.
  • Apply policy-aware communication habits, especially when serving minors and public-school environments.

1) Why This Matters: The Pressure Triangle

Competitive sports can shape strong character—but it can also intensify inner pressure in ways that remain hidden. A Ministry Sciences lens helps you notice patterns beneath the surface. In many sports environments, three forces combine into a powerful pressure triangle:

  1. Perfectionism â€” “If I’m not flawless, I’m not safe.”
  2. Comparison â€” “If I’m not as good as them, I don’t belong.”
  3. Exposure â€” “If I fail, everyone will see it—and it will define me.”

In earlier eras, a bad moment might fade by next week. Now a mistake can become a clip, a meme, or a comment thread—especially in youth sports, where families, peers, and community groups often overlap.

Chaplain insight: Pressure becomes spiritually dangerous when it moves from “I want to improve” to “I must never be seen failing.” That shift is often where shame grows.

Your role is not to remove pressure by controlling the environment. Your role is to provide a steady, consent-based ministry of presence that helps athletes interpret pressure without being crushed by it.


2) Perfectionism: Not the Same as Excellence

Perfectionism often wears the uniform of “high standards,” but it functions more like fear than discipline.

  • Excellence says: “I will grow through effort.”
  • Perfectionism says: “I must never be seen failing.”

Common signs of perfectionism in sports

You may notice:

  • harsh self-talk after small mistakes
  • “all-or-nothing” thinking (“I’m a star” vs. “I’m trash”)
  • inability to enjoy wins (only relief, never gratitude)
  • intense fear of disappointing others
  • overtraining, hidden pain, or ignoring injury signals
  • emotional shutdown after feedback
  • compulsive rehearsal, rumination, or inability to “turn it off”

Perfectionism can also show up in coaches and parents:

  • rigid expectations
  • anger when outcomes don’t match effort
  • using shame language to “motivate”
  • unrealistic pressure tied to scholarships or status

A chaplain’s in-lane response to perfectionism

You are not diagnosing. You are noticing patterns and offering stabilizing care.

Try phrases like:

  • “You care deeply. That’s clear. But you don’t have to punish yourself to grow.”
  • “Let’s separate effort from self-worth.”
  • “What would ‘strong and steady’ look like instead of ‘perfect’?”
  • “Would you like me to pray, or just sit with you for a minute?”

If Scripture is welcome, keep it short and non-performative. You might anchor to:

  • Romans 8:1 (WEB): “There is therefore now no condemnation
”
  • Matthew 6:34 (WEB): “Therefore don’t be anxious for tomorrow
”

3) Comparison: The Fuel of Anxiety and the Thief of Joy

Comparison is often framed as a motivation tool—“Look at them, get better!”—but for many athletes it becomes a quiet torment:

  • “I’ll never catch up.”
  • “Everyone else belongs more than I do.”
  • “If I don’t surpass them, I’m invisible.”

Comparison intensifies in:

  • roster competition and playing time battles
  • recruiting and scholarship decisions
  • rankings, highlight reels, and social media follows
  • injury recovery (watching others progress faster)
  • positional competition (you’re not “against the other team,” you’re against your teammate)

Chaplain move: Return them to their lane

A simple, stabilizing question is:

  • “What is your assignment today—one thing you can do faithfully?”

You can also ask:

  • “When did comparison start feeling like panic?”
  • “Who are the safe people you can be honest with?”
  • “What would it look like to measure growth instead of status?”

This is not motivational speaking. It is discipleship-level soul care: guiding someone away from a false measuring stick.


4) Social Media: A Comparison Machine and a Shame Amplifier

Social media can be used for encouragement and connection—but in sports it often functions like a constant evaluation room.

It can amplify:

  • highlight-reel identity (“I am my best clips”)
  • audience addiction (likes = worth)
  • public shaming after mistakes
  • body image pressure and identity confusion
  • harassment, threats, or sexually exploitative messages (especially for minors)
  • compulsive checking that disrupts sleep and recovery

Ministry Sciences insight:
When a nervous system is already overloaded, social media adds “micro-stressors” that accumulate:

  • one comment = tension
  • one rumor = spiraling
  • one post = comparison loop
  • one thread = shame storm

Policy-aware chaplain posture around social media

You are not the phone police. But you can offer wise options in a non-controlling way:

  • “Would it help to take a 24–48 hour quiet window after games?”
  • “Do you have a trusted adult who can help you handle comments?”
  • “What happens in your body when you scroll—tightness, anger, shame, panic?”
  • “Would it be wise to unfollow accounts that spike anxiety?”

With minors: never create private messaging patterns outside policy safeguards. If you communicate digitally, do it through approved channels, and follow observable/two-deep norms when required.


5) A Simple Chaplain Tool: The STEADY Reset (2 Minutes)

When an athlete is spiraling, they often need stabilization before insight. Ask permission first:

  • “Would you like a simple reset that helps some athletes when everything feels loud?”

STEADY Reset

  • S — Stop: pause the shame spiral (“Let’s slow this down.”)
  • T — Tell the truth: â€œA mistake happened” is not “I am a mistake.”
  • E — Exhale: slow breathing; calm presence; shoulders down.
  • A — Ask for support: â€œWho is safe to talk to today?”
  • D — Do the next right thing: one step in the next hour, not a life plan.
  • Y — Yield the outcome: release what can’t be controlled; if invited, pray.

This is not therapy. It is a short stabilizing practice that fits chaplaincy lanes.

Optional short prayer (if invited):
“Lord, give peace and steadiness. Help them take the next right step. Amen.”


6) When Pressure Crosses into Danger: Referral Readiness

Sometimes perfectionism and comparison reveal deeper distress:

  • panic attacks
  • eating disorder behaviors
  • severe sleep disruption
  • self-harm thoughts
  • substance misuse
  • abusive dynamics, exploitation, or harassment threats
  • trauma symptoms after injury, violence, or public humiliation

Your lane:

  • listen calmly
  • do not diagnose
  • connect them to proper supports
  • honor reporting rules when safety is involved

A strong, non-alarming phrase:

  • “I care about you too much to let you carry this alone. Let’s connect you with the right help.”

Mandatory reporting reminder

If there is harm to self/others, abuse, exploitation, or credible threats—follow your organization’s safeguarding protocols. Do not promise secrecy.


7) What Not to Do (Common Chaplain Pitfalls Here)

  • Don’t diagnose or label (“You’re depressed,” “You have OCD,” “You’re traumatized”).
  • Don’t become a 24/7 crisis responder or secret-keeper.
  • Don’t undermine coaches, parents, trainers, or administrators.
  • Don’t use spiritual pressure (“If you had more faith, you wouldn’t feel this”).
  • Don’t chase a dramatic moment or public testimony to “redeem the failure.”
  • Don’t counsel minors privately outside policy-approved safeguards.
  • Don’t share identifying stories, screenshots, or team details.

8) A Closing Formation Thought for Chaplains

Sports forms people through repetition. Shame also forms people through repetition. Your steady presence introduces a different repetition:

  • dignity over ridicule
  • identity over image
  • truth over rumor
  • calm over collapse
  • support over isolation

You’re not trying to remove competition. You’re helping protect the soul inside competition.


Reflection + Application Questions

  1. Which pressure shows up most in your setting: perfectionism, comparison, or social media exposure? How do you know?
  2. Write three chaplain phrases that reduce shame without minimizing responsibility.
  3. What are two signs that “excellence” has slipped into “perfectionism” for an athlete or coach?
  4. Practice the STEADY reset in your own words. What would it sound like in a locker room or after a loss?
  5. What is your local referral pathway if an athlete shows warning signs (self-harm, abuse, severe distress, harassment threats)?
  6. List the top three policy boundaries you must honor in your context (minors, messaging, travel, isolation, reporting).

Academic References (for further study)

  • Flett, G. L., & Hewitt, P. L. (2002). Perfectionism and maladjustment: An overview of theoretical, definitional, and treatment issues. In G. L. Flett & P. L. Hewitt (Eds.), Perfectionism: Theory, Research, and Treatment (pp. 5–31). American Psychological Association.
  • Festinger, L. (1954). A theory of social comparison processes. Human Relations, 7(2), 117–140.
  • Twenge, J. M. (2017). iGen. Atria Books.
  • Keles, B., McCrae, N., & Grealish, A. (2020). A systematic review: The influence of social media on depression, anxiety and psychological distress in adolescents. International Journal of Adolescence and Youth, 25(1), 79–93.
  • Gustafsson, H., Madigan, D. J., & Lundkvist, E. (2018). Burnout in athletes: A systematic review. The Sport Psychologist, 32(1), 1–15.

Last modified: Sunday, February 22, 2026, 1:47 PM