Why You Should Embrace Your Impostor
Self Syndrome
Instead of trying to conquer self-doubt, based on preceived inadequacies or insecurities, use it to your advantage!
Once,
earlier in my career, I was invited to an elegant media event in Los
Angeles. As I walked around the room, full of journalists from some of
the biggest publications in the world, I felt so out of place that I hid
in the bathroom until my best friend arrived.
I
look back on that incident as one of my worst attacks of impostor
syndrome, that ubiquitous if not slightly overused term to describe the
insecurity, vulnerability, and discomfort that comes with moving forward
in your career — like when you finally get your dream job and convince
yourself you just got lucky or that you somehow scammed the hiring
manager. Or you get a prestigious new title on your business card and
laugh because it seems ridiculous to think of yourself that way.
Some of the most prominent people I’ve interviewed or talked to about impostor syndrome — business
owners, research scientists, TV writers — said that it only gets worse
with success. The more you achieve, the more you feel like a fraud. But
as awful as that may seem, impostor syndrome isn’t all bad. The key is
to use this so-called syndrome to your advantage.
If you feel a little insecure, you’re more aware of your own weaknesses and therefore better equipped to change them.
Impostor syndrome “is both good and bad,” says Kelsey Ramsden, author of The Success Hangover.
“It’s bad in that it stops a great many people from progressing and
sharing their capacity and talents with the world.” On the other hand,
Ramsden says, impostor syndrome is also a symptom of breaking out of
your comfort zone, and that’s where growth happens. Next time you
experience this feeling, know that there are plenty of reasons to
embrace it.
1. It’s a sign you’re on the right path.
Ambitious people might be especially prone to impostor syndrome. The term comes from research in the 1970s that studied the trait in women specifically. Writing in the journal Psychotherapy: Theory, Research, and Practice,
psychologists Pauline Clance and Suzanne Imes noted that the phenomenon
“appears to be particularly prevalent and intense among a select sample
of high-achieving women.” A more recent study on impostor syndrome found that it’s the top fear of executives around the world.
There
are a couple reasons ambitious people might be more prone to
impostorism. For one, they’re more likely to take on challenging new
roles, and it’s only natural to feel insecure when you’re first starting
out with additional responsibilities. A slightly more complex reason is
that ambitious people tend to devalue their abilities. “When a person
happens to be good at something — when they work hard and approach
mastery, or perhaps even those few who have a gift — when those people
do the work, it becomes intuitive,” Ramsden says. “So we wonder, ‘Did I
trick them? Did I get away with something?’ Your ability to synthesize
ideas, for example, might come so easily to you that you can’t imagine
anyone valuing that skill.
It
helps to think of impostor syndrome as just a catchy way to describe
vulnerability — because really, that’s what it is. And ambition begets
vulnerability: Asking for raises, negotiating new job offers, and
gunning for promotions are all difficult, uncomfortable things to do.
But if you want to make progress, it’s going to feel a little
uncomfortable, so you might as well learn to lean into it.
2. It can motivate you.
When
you feel like an impostor, you can do one of two things: You can run
away and hide in the bathroom, or you can prove to the world — and
perhaps yourself — that you do indeed belong. If you choose the latter,
impostor syndrome can be a powerful motivator. You try harder, learn new
things, pick up new skills, and ask the right questions until you
become comfortable enough in your role that you no longer feel like a
fraud.
Along
the way, you can take comfort in the fact that the type of people who
doubt their potential are often the type who have quite a bit of it. You
may have heard of the Dunning-Kruger effect,
the tendency for low performers to overestimate their skills. (In other
words, people who claim to be “the best” at something usually aren’t.)
But in their research,
psychologists David Dunning and Justin Kruger also found the opposite
to be true: Competent people have a tendency to underestimate their
competence, which, in turn, leaves them more open to improving.
So,
if you feel a little insecure, that’s not necessarily a bad thing.
You’re probably more competent than you think, but even better, you’re
more aware of your own weaknesses and therefore more equipped to push
yourself to change them. Admit to your impostor syndrome, but also
acknowledge the many times you’ve underestimated your abilities. Use
this as a motivator to prove yourself wrong and work your way out of
impostorism. Chances are you’ll be surprised at the work you’re able to
do and the tasks you can accomplish.
3. It keeps you on your toes.
A strong need for certainty, also known as cognitive closure,
makes it hard to admit when you’re wrong — and thus improve your
abilities, expand your outlook, and embrace creativity, all traits
necessary for success. When we feel like impostors, sometimes we feel
the need to sweep it under the rug. We focus on faking it enough to
convince others, and ourselves, that we know damn well what we’re doing
and that we’re confident and secure in our role.
But
this backfires quickly. At one of my first jobs, a boss handed me a
spreadsheet and assumed I would know what to do with it, but as soon as I
looked at the jumble of numbers and letters, it became very clear that
he was wrong. Rather than admit my uncertainty and ask for help, I sat
at my desk for an hour trying fruitlessly to decipher the file.
When
you lean into your impostorism, you can avoid situations like this.
Being comfortable with a bit of uncertainty is a good thing: It keeps
you sharp, observant, open-minded, and adaptable. It also keeps you from
looking silly when, an hour later, you walk into your boss’s office and
admit you have no idea what to do with that spreadsheet. The Socratic paradox — “The
only thing that I know for sure is that I know nothing for
sure” — might be a platitude, but it rings true here. If you’re
uncertain, you’re probably also open to learning new things. If I could
go back in time, I’d tell my younger self to be secure enough to admit
my insecurity.
4. It encourages you to focus on the work.
Impostor
syndrome has everything to do with identity and how we view ourselves.
“Many of us, the most accomplished and driven, are led to believe that
who we are is what we have done,” Ramsden says. “If we believe we are
our accomplishments, then, when we accomplish something that does not
fit within our expectations of who we are, you have a crack where
impostor syndrome seeps in.”
Let’s
say you get a big promotion and a new, glamorous title. It’s easy to
become anxious about living up to everything the title implies, but
titles and our associations with them can be more intimidating than the
actual work they require. If you get to a point in your career where
you’re promoted to a position of power, you’re probably already used to
many of the tasks involved with that role. Sure, you’ll learn new
things, but you don’t have to live up to a new identity, which is a
completely overwhelming thing to do. You just have to do the work.
“When
we finally find that what we have done is secondary to who we are, we
begin to break free of impostor syndrome,” Ramsden says. It’s important,
in other words, to separate your work from your identity. This
separation is good for your own mental health, and without being so
attached to your job, you can look at it objectively and without bias,
which makes it easier to do really excellent work. And then, with enough
time, you can look at what you’ve accomplished — and what you’re
continually accomplishing — and use that to feel a little more secure
that you’ve earned the role you’re in.
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