BY
I
once ran a workshop for women entrepeneurs and I asked the question, ” Which of
you secretly feels like you’re an imposter? You feel as if you don’t really
know what you’re doing, you’re amazed that no-one has noticed yet and you’re
worried that, one day, you’ll be found out. ”
Every
person in the room put her hand up.
I’ve
mentioned this to quite a lot of people I’ve worked with since then and most of
them have said, ” Oh, do other people feel like that as well? I thought it was
just me!
Yes,
“imposter syndrome” is very common. It affects both men and women and it can
affect people who would appear to others to be successful and confident .
If
you suffer from it, you’re carrying around some every negative thoughts about
yourself – or limiting beliefs. These may be something like:
§ I can’t do this job very well
§ other people are better/cleverer than
me
§ my opinion is worth less than other
people’s
§ other people find things easier than
I do
§ other people are more confident than
I am
§ I’m not the sort of person to be
really successful
§ I’m only fooling people into
thinking I can do this
As
well as thinking negative things about yourself, you’re also making a lot of
assumptions about other people. For example, you probably don’t know whether
other people are confident or find things easy. They just give you that
impression. You don’t know how they feel inside, any more than they know how
you really feel.
How
can you break free from this?
The
first thing is to realise that you’re doing it. Do you recognise any of the
beliefs I’ve listed above? If so, then at least you’ve got them out in the open.
The
next thing is to accept that these are just thoughts, they’re not facts.
They’re just notions you have. Who knows where you got them from?
A
lot of our negative thoughts come from childhood, when someone told us we were
no good at something. For example, a teacher may have told you that you
couldn’t draw or sing or a parent told you that you were clumsy and and you’ve
carried that with you ever since.
How
can you change a negative thought?
Here’s
one exercise you can try.
Take
one negative thought, such as one from the list above, and write it down. Then
ask yourself:
§ Do I really believe this?
§ Is it true? Can I absolutely say
that it’s true?
§ Could I be wrong about it?
§ What evidence do I have for this
thought?
§ How does thinking this make me feel?
§ How would I feel if I didn’t have
this thought? How would I act differently
Just
going this far will help you to see that some of these beliefs don’t stand up
to close scrutiny.
You
can then go further and write down some positive beliefs or thoughts, the reverse
of the negative ones, such as:
§ I am very capable and good at this
job
§ I can learn and develop new skills
whenever I need to
§ I have achieved a lot and can
achieve even more
§ My opinion is worth as much as
anyone else’s
§ Ask yourself whether these new
beliefs could be just as true as the old ones. Look for evidence that supports
them, begin to act on them and strengthen them ( just as you did with the old
ones )
Try
to catch yourself thinking the old thoughts and stop it. Work on replacing them
with some new, more positive beliefs. This isn’t about deluding yourself or
trying to ignore reality. Your old thoughts weren’t reality either, they were
just one view of how things are.
Another
thing you can do is to get feedback from other people you respect. You’ll
probably be surprised that their view is actually more positive than your own!
And, if they do point out some areas where you could improve, then you’ve got
something concrete to work on, instead of just having some vague idea in your
head that you’re somehow “not good enough”.
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