Meta Description: Perfectionism in men often looks like discipline or high standards, but it can quietly drive anxiety, overthinking, burnout and withdrawal. Learn the signs and what actually helps.
Key Summary
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A lot of men do not walk around saying they are perfectionists.
They say they are driven. They say they like things done properly. They say they have standards. They say they do not trust many people to get things right. They say they are hard on themselves because that is what keeps them sharp.
That is why perfectionism flies under the radar.
From the outside, it can look like discipline, competence and reliability. From the inside, it can feel like constant pressure, second-guessing, fear of failure and an inability to switch off. The issue is not whether perfectionism can drive anxiety. It can. The real question is whether a man notices it before it starts running his life.
The latest ABS National Study of Mental Health and Wellbeing found anxiety disorders were the most common 12-month mental disorders in Australia, affecting 17% of people overall and 13.3% of males. Men had lower rates than women, but that does not mean anxiety is rare in men. It means a lot of men are still carrying it, often without naming it clearly.
Recent Australian research also keeps landing in the same place on perfectionism. A 2024 Australian study led through La Trobe found heightened clinical perfectionism was associated with lower wellbeing and increased distress, and that processes like experiential avoidance, cognitive fusion and low self-compassion helped explain why. In plain English: perfectionism does not just make life harder; it traps people in rigid mental patterns that keep distress going.
A 2024 meta-analysis linked to ANU found large to very large associations between social anxiety and perfectionistic concerns such as concern over mistakes, doubts about actions, socially prescribed perfectionism and self-presentational perfectionism. That matters because men often feel pressure not just to succeed, but to appear solid while doing it.
Australian clinical guidance from WA’s Centre for Clinical Interventions also describes the same loop seen in practice: perfectionism is maintained by all-or-nothing thinking, excessive checking, self-criticism, avoidance and anxiety about not meeting impossible standards.
He does not just check the email once. He checks it five times. He does not just prepare for the meeting. He rehearses every angle. He does not just want to do well. He wants to remove every possible chance of looking stupid, unprepared or not good enough.
That is not always diligence. Sometimes it is anxiety in a suit.
A lot of perfectionistic men put things off not because they do not care, but because they care too much. If the internal standard is brutal enough, starting feels risky. Better to delay than do it imperfectly.
That lines up with current Australian male mental health guidance, which notes procrastination can be one of the signs anxiety is already in the mix.
A healthy standard says, “I missed that. Fix it.”
Perfectionism says, “You idiot. What is wrong with you?”
One response builds competence. The other slowly grinds a man down.
A perfectionistic man often does not land the plane. He gets the result, then immediately shifts the goalposts, spots what was still not good enough, or starts worrying about the next thing.
From the outside, that can look ambitious. In reality, it often means the nervous system never gets told it is safe to stand down.
Men do not always show anxiety through obvious fear. Sometimes it comes out as being short-tempered, emotionally flat, restless, avoidant or impossible to please. Healthy Male’s guidance on anxiety in men points to signs like procrastination and anger or irritability, which is exactly why perfectionism can go unnoticed for so long.
It helps to stop calling it “just standards” when the standard is clearly brutal.
A better sentence is:
“I am tying too much of my worth to getting this right.”
That is a more honest starting point than pretending this is all just discipline.
Excellence is healthy. Perfectionism is rigid.
Excellence says: “I want to do this well.”
Perfectionism says: “If this is not flawless, I have failed.”
That distinction is one of the biggest mindset shifts men need to make. Giving up perfectionism does not mean becoming careless. It means becoming effective without being internally flogged every day.
Avoidance feeds anxiety. Action weakens it.
If you keep delaying because you want to feel more certain, more ready or more confident first, that is the trap. The move is not endless preparation. The move is taking the next reasonable action before your brain talks you out of it.
WA’s CCI perfectionism resources specifically frame reducing perfectionistic behaviours and tolerating the anxiety that comes with it as part of breaking the cycle.
Mistakes are information. They are not a verdict on your worth.
A lot of men need to learn this properly because they were praised for performance, judged for weakness, or raised in environments where mistakes felt expensive. That background can explain the pattern, but it does not justify keeping it unchallenged.
This is where some men get it twisted.
Self-compassion is not self-pity. It is not letting yourself off the hook. It is removing the useless self-abuse so you can respond like an adult instead of a bully.
The 2024 La Trobe study found self-compassion was part of the picture linking perfectionism with wellbeing and distress, which makes practical sense: men who can acknowledge pressure without attacking themselves tend to cope better than men who confuse cruelty with accountability.
A lot of men wait until the anxiety is affecting sleep, work, relationships or motivation before they admit something is off.
That is backward.
The better move is to get onto it when you start noticing the pattern: overthinking, irritability, procrastination, never feeling good enough, and pressure that does not let up no matter how much you achieve.
For practical support, you could internally link to:
Perfectionism in men gets praised far too often for what it is.
People call it discipline. Drive. High standards. Reliability.
Sometimes it is those things.
But when it is driven by fear, shame, self-criticism and the constant need to prove yourself, it stops being a strength and starts becoming a quiet engine for anxiety.
That is the part men miss.
You can look capable and still be struggling. You can look productive and still be trapped. You can look solid while privately living like every task is a test of your worth.
That is not strength. That is pressure.
The goal is not to lower yourself into mediocrity. The goal is to stop treating your humanity like a flaw. You can still care about quality. You can still take pride in your work. You can still have standards.
You just do not need to destroy yourself to meet them.
Whether you are dealing with anxiety, constant overthinking, burnout, self-pressure or the feeling that nothing you do is ever quite enough, Man Counsellor offers a confidential, practical space to work through it.
You do not need to keep white-knuckling your way through it and calling it discipline.
Book an appointment Or click here to learn more about our services.
Australian Bureau of Statistics. (2024). National Study of Mental Health and Wellbeing, 2020–2022. Australian Bureau of Statistics.
https://www.abs.gov.au/statistics/health/mental-health/national-study-mental-health-and-wellbeing/latest-release
Australian Institute of Health and Welfare. (2025). Prevalence and impact of mental illness. AIHW.
https://www.aihw.gov.au/mental-health/overview/prevalence-and-impact-of-mental-illness
Centre for Clinical Interventions. (n.d.). Perfectionism self-help resources. Government of Western Australia.
https://www.cci.health.wa.gov.au/resources/looking-after-yourself/perfectionism
Centre for Clinical Interventions. (n.d.). What is perfectionism? Government of Western Australia.
https://www.cci.health.wa.gov.au/~/media/CCI/Mental-Health-Professionals/Perfectionism/Perfectionism---Information-Sheets/Perfectionism-Information-Sheet---01---What-is-Perfectionism.pdf
Centre for Clinical Interventions. (n.d.). What maintains perfectionism. Government of Western Australia.
https://www.cci.health.wa.gov.au/~/media/CCI/Mental-Health-Professionals/Perfectionism/Perfectionism---Information-Sheets/Perfectionism-Information-Sheet---02---What-Maintains-Perfectionism.pdf
Centre for Clinical Interventions. (n.d.). Perfectionism behaviours. Government of Western Australia.
https://www.cci.health.wa.gov.au/~/media/CCI/Mental-Health-Professionals/Perfectionism/Perfectionism---Information-Sheets/Perfectionism-Information-Sheet---03---Perfectionism-Behaviours.pdf
Healthy Male. (2024, August 27). 4 signs of anxiety in men you might be missing.
https://healthymale.org.au/health-article/signs-anxiety-men/
Healthy Male. (2023, March 17). Anxiety in men: How to recognise it and deal with it.
https://www.healthymale.org.au/health-article/anxiety-how-recognise-and-deal-it/
Nguyen, H., Morris, E., Chur-Hansen, A., Byrne, A. V., and Wade, T. D. (2024). The role of clinical perfectionism and psychological flexibility in distress and wellbeing. Clinical Psychologist.
https://opal.latrobe.edu.au/articles/journal_contribution/The_role_of_clinical_perfectionism_and_psychological_flexibility_in_distress_and_wellbeing/27667317
Ferber, K. A., Sahib, A., Levinson, C. A., and Rapee, R. M. (2024). Perfectionism and social anxiety: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Clinical Psychology: Science and Practice.
https://researchportalplus.anu.edu.au/en/publications/perfectionism-and-social-anxiety-a-systematic-review-and-meta-ana/
Khossousi, V., Greene, D., Shafran, R., Lunn, J., and Egan, S. J. (2024). The relationship between perfectionism and self-esteem in adults: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapy.
https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/behavioural-and-cognitive-psychotherapy/article/relationship-between-perfectionism-and-selfesteem-in-adults-a-systematic-review-and-metaanalysis/1F0875DD950E4018522B6113FACF6984