Tag: who is an impostor
12 Mind Shifts to Overcome Impostor Syndrome
Do you fear friends or colleagues will find out you are not as worthy as they think?
Or you feel your success (irrespective big or small) was a fluke and people will soon find out you are a fraud?
Don't worry it's the Impostor Syndrome where you feel like a fraudulent, a pretender, a hoaxer (which you are not).
Approximately 70 percent of people will experience at least one episode of impostor syndrome in their lives.
What's Impostor Syndrome? Why is it vicious?
Often spelled as Imposter, feeling an Impostor is incompetence to deal with your imperfections and perform at the highest standards you set for yourself.
It’s like riding high on egomania while enjoying success and then sliding down to fear of being called a cheater or a fraud.
You feel like a loser irrespective how successful you are.
It makes you incapable to focus on your current work, living in obscurity, not opening up to new opportunities.
Rewards and Recognition do more harm than good where you feel you cannot justify your credentials in the upcoming project, and you fear people will know about your incompetence.
The feeling of an Impostor kills creativity where you are constantly self-judging.
You are too hard on yourself overthinking about people’s opinion of you.
It retracts you from the present moment, discharging the concentration, denting your flow, and jolts your personal and professional growth.
The good news is that you are not alone!
Celebrity quotes on Impostor Syndrome:
When I was younger, I just did it. I just acted. It was just there. So now when I receive recognition for my acting, I feel incredibly uncomfortable. I tend to turn in on myself. I feel like an impostor. It was just something I did.
—Emma Watson
Sometimes I wake up in the morning before going off to a shoot, and I think, I can’t do this. I’m a fraud.
—Kate Winslet
No matter what we've done, there comes a point where you think, 'How did I get here? When are they going to discover that I am, in fact, a fraud and take everything away from me?
—Tom Hanks
I have written eleven books, but each time I think, 'uh oh, they’re going to find out now. I’ve run a game on everybody, and they’re going to find me out.
—Maya Angelou
My Encounter with Impostor Syndrome
Insightful publications like Lifehack, Pick the Brain, Purpose fairy, Dumb Little Man published my articles.
I received accolades for these, including some of my works published on my blog.
Why am I bragging?
The critic appreciation prod to deliver more, as I began expecting too much out of myself.
I started fearing people’s eyes, thinking about them, all of it abstaining from workflow, diminishing my quality of work, questioning my talent and abilities.
I could not write, unable to get rid of the perfectionist inside me self-judging constantly.
My creativity fired many times, soon to nosedive into a polluted pool of uncertainties.
I could not do love doing most — Expressing my thoughts and emotions.
And that led to Impostor Syndrome where there were dilemmas and ambiguity, causing fear and my lower self cried: People will...