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You are here: Home / Archives for imposter syndrome

imposter syndrome

Avoiding Vulnerability

January 15, 2018 //  by DulcieTRT//  Leave a Comment

So today I was finding things to avoid writing. The fear of committing ideas that sound great in your head down on paper is sometimes too much.

I’d already done,”It’s Monday – you are never fresh enough to write your best things on Mondays”

and

“No point starting now, kids are back in an hour”

So after a call from my great and wise friend Sally, in a final act of desperate uber-avoidance, I even found time for “tele…during the day”…and watched a bit of TED.

To give you a bit of background another of my great and wise friends Nikki had sent me a link to this TED talk this morning. Brene Brown. You may have heard of it as 32.7M people have seen it!

Then when I spoke to Sally this afternoon, I remembered she had sent me the same link. In 2015.

And then when avoiding writing and instead doing a “To Do” list (those of you who know me personally will know that I was really scraping the bottom of that avoidance barrel!) I wrote down “Contact Alison for feedback”. And then remembered that my great and wise friend Alison had also recommend the same TED talk, Last Year. It felt like FATE.

So as a result, I watched Brene Brown’s TED talk on Vulnerability right the way through. And forgive me, but I then binged and watched the next one on Shame too.

I know how brilliant TED talks are. I recommend them all the time. But I still feel guilty about watching them “in work time”.

Yes I know. Even though I run my own Company. Bonkers. But that’s for another day.

Anyway I “made time” to actually watch the whole 20 minutes – I’d always been “too busy – and told myself  “I’m sure I have got the jist of it anyway from the bit I have read/watched/picked up…” And then another 20 minutes. Television. In broad daylight. Shocking!!

And here is what happened.

My first and second reactions were fascinating…

Reaction 1 – Oh my god, this is so brilliant. I so love it that I am learning to be vulnerable too. This is all the stuff I talk about all the time. Made real by another proper scientific researcher. Brilliant.

Reaction 2 – Oh no. Any of the millions of people who have seen this already will think I have just been ripping off her stuff all this time – they will think I have seen it already and have just been recycling someone’s ideas and style.

Ha ha ha ha ha ha!

My third reaction interesting and shows how much I have come on in terms of vulnerability and shame – thanks to friends like Nikki, Sally and Alison. I thought…Wow – there is a good story in those reactions. I ought to share it!

So rather than be ashamed of those reactions, I thought I’d write about them right now instead.

Please don’t do what I did and don’t watch these talks because you think you know this already. They are a real joy by a real person. But here is what I got from my TV binge.

1) If you don’t feel Vulnerable sometimes, you can’t really feel anything – joy, happiness etc.

2) If you don’t feel a sense of “not being good enough”, then you are probably a sociopath. So don’t worry about the Imposter thing – I’ve done blogs and a book chapter on “IT” as I call if if you want more info.

3) Sharing and talking about your experiences is not something to hold back on until you are “good enough” or “ready” – people want to see and hear from you as a human being – BEFORE you become a professional expert – because we all know that however much you study/do/rehearse you will never feel like a professional expert – even if you are one!

So here is my go at sharing my vulnerability, shame, imposter thinking, my suppression of my “who do you think you are” thinking that someone will want to hear your take on it Dulcie.

And finally my hope. That in sharing it, you might watch and share it too.

A final thought. I would have gone and have some wine so as not to think about my shame, vulnerability and imposter thinking, if the first video didn’t expressly talk about that being a really good way to numb and avoid those feeling.

Bollocks. Some people really do know what they are talking about!!

www.brenebrown.com

Category: Imposter ThinkingTag: coaching techniques, imposter syndrome, resistence

Do you have Imposter Syndrome…?

September 23, 2016 //  by DulcieTRT//  2 Comments

Ever have that sinking feeling that today is going to be the day when you finally get caught out ? The day when the mistakes, white lies and near misses of your past are finally going to catch up with you? And everything you have, will slowly start to unravel as you are revealed as a fraud?

If so then read on…you are not alone, research has suggested that over 70% of us feel this way sometimes. Maybe a bit of science might calm your heart-rate?

The technical term given to it in 1978 by 2 American psychologists is “imposter syndrome”. It is so called because you feel yourself to be an “imposter” somehow living a life that you do not rightly deserve. That you don’t really have the skills and expertise at the level your position or salary seems to merit.

You may remember a Talking Heads song with the lines “You may find yourself behind the wheel of a large automobile and you may find yourself in a beautiful house, with a beautiful wife. And you may ask yourself, Well, how did I get here ?..”

In our house we call Imposter Syndrome “running from the blagging police” – we laugh over a beer about an old fashioned bobby, running red faced towards us and simultaneously blowing a whistle. When he finally catches up, he puts a friendly but firm hand on our shoulder and says “Come on mate. Times up. You’ve had a good run at it but it is time to admit you don’t really know what you are doing and hand back the car/house/wife.”

I have had clients who have told me that their life has changed quite literally overnight when they realised this was “real” thing. When I told them that research suggested this was the number 1 coaching topic for Executives you could almost hear their sigh of relief. I don’t like to refer to it as a “syndrome” anymore. It makes it sound like an illness or something quite rare. Now that we know it is part of the human experience for most people, I talk about it as Imposter Thinking – Here are the tips that I share with my clients so that they can not let Imposter Thinking get in their way. I hope they help you too.

Accept Imposter Thinking is a normal part of being successful. 

Success usually relies on taking a few risks. Without taking some risks we can’t really make any mistakes. And we get our best learning from getting things a bit wrong and trying again. So making mistakes, rescuing some near misses and flying by the seat of your pants sometimes are likely to be part of the reason you are successful…Not evidence of the opposite!

Accept Imposter Thinking as an inevitable consequence of our brains not being wired to hear other people’s thoughts

We can only judge other people by what we see on the outside. By their results and outputs. What they say and do. We judge ourselves from the inside and judge ourselves based on our intentions. We process thousands of thoughts every minute. Thus we know intimately about every single time we had a near miss, or something we achieved was frankly down to a good dose of luck or chance. There are millions of pieces of evidence. But there are millions of pieces of evidence in everyone else’s mind too. It’s just that we can’t know about them. We simply don’t and can’t see into the minds of other people like we do our own.

Do the Maths – there are worse things to be than an Imposter…

Bertrand Russell said “The trouble with the world is that the stupid are cocksure and the intelligent are full of doubt”. Think about it. You have probably worked with enough people to have seen a few idiots and some wild overconfidence at first hand. Given that research suggests that 70% of people suffer from Imposter syndrome at some point and clinicians estimate that around 4% of the population are sociopaths and 1% are psychopaths….Yeah…Do the Maths. I’m blunt with my clients sometimes. “Don’t worry – it’s just evidence that you aren’t stupid or a psychopath”

If you feel like an Imposter sometimes, you are in good company

Many other, extremely successful people feel this way too. Take Sheryl Sandberg who says “There are still days when I wake up feeling like a fraud, not sure I should be where I am”. Howard Schulz describes how the experience doesn’t diminish if you get more senior. He said of the CEO’s that he knows that “very few people whether you have been in the job before or not, get into the seat and believe, today, that they are qualified”. It’s not restricted to business. Maya Angelou a hugely gifted writer who has won Tony’s, Grammy’s and been shortlisted for the Pulitzer Prize wrote “I have written 11 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”. There have been countless articles written on this topic – the Harvard Business Review, the BBC, The Guardian, The Times. It’s really not just you…

There are some things that have really helped me and my clients. They might help you too…

When it happens, welcome it. It is simply evidence that despite your success, you haven’t got too big for your boots and your brain still wants to learn more.

Accept you don’t have to achieve perfection to deserve what you have. No one is perfect or the finished article. And if you thought you were perfect…well…revert back to doing the Maths!

Realise that you can reduce the risks. You can set your bar lower so it will happen less often. But you will also be pretty mediocre by your own standards.

Don’t expect it to get any better – another promotion or more success won’t make this go away. If anything, you will just get more “evidence” that you have been over-promoted!

Actively work with smart, honest people who have different strengths to you. Make it safe for them to give you feedback. You can stop worrying you will miss something because they’ll let you know.

You have a choice about how much power to let it have. Decide not to give it head-space and energy that could be better spent reflecting on the facts that underpin your success and learning from mistakes.

Focus on what you did do when something went well. Not what you didn’t do. You don’t have to have done everything perfectly for the end result to be good enough. Remember the 80:20 rule.

Help your self and others by naming what it is. Dare to be vulnerable when your instincts are telling you to keep your cards close to your chest. It made it less insidious and easier to laugh about it.

Use the “worried” feeling that you don’t know enough to your advantage. Remember you are seeing things with fresh eyes. Research shows that many scientific breakthroughs come from non-experts daring to ask a “stupid question”

If it pops up, congratulate yourself that it is probably evidence you are conscientious, reflective, honest and modest. Would you really want to NOT feel it and be the opposite of those ?

For more information on coaching to help with Imposter Thinking get in touch at dulcie@profitablyengaged.com or to train teams on how to overcome it, ask us for help at hello@teabreaktraining.com

Category: It's Not Bloody Rocket ScienceTag: fear of being found out, get caught out, imposter syndrome, imposter thinking, over promoted

Fear of being found out…

April 12, 2016 //  by DulcieTRT//  Leave a Comment

One of the things I talk to clients about most often is a fear of being found out. Having a kind of perpetual background worry that today is going to be the day that you get caught out. That you don’t quite deserve the results that you have achieved so far and that because quite a bit was down to luck and not judgement or hard work then someone is going to shout today “Come on in number 7, your time is up!”. And you will have to hand back the life you have and the achievements you have racked up.

The great news is that you can very probably stop worrying. This fear has a name – Imposter Syndrome. And you can save yourself some wasted energy today and invest the thinking in something else. Because the fear is normal, but you can overcome it.

Category: Imposter ThinkingTag: imposter syndrome

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