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The Impostor Syndrome - Finding a Name for
the Feelings
by Dr. Valerie Young
I'll never forget
the day I first learned about the Impostor Syndrome.
It was 1983. A chronic procrastinator, I was in my fourth year of a
doctoral program.
Like a lot of
graduate students, my status was what
was commonly referred to as "A-B-D," meaning I'd completed "all but the
dissertation."
I was sitting in class one day when another student rose to present the
findings of a study conducted by psychology professor Pauline Clance
and psychologist Suzanne Imes called The Impostor Phenomenon Among High
Achieving Women (1978).
In a nutshell, Clance and Imes found that many of their female clients
seemed unable to internalize their accomplishments.
External proof of
intelligence and ability in the form of academic excellence, degrees,
recognition, promotions and the like was routinely dismissed.
Instead, success
was attributed to contacts, luck, timing, perseverance, personality or
otherwise having "fooled" others into thinking they were smarter and
more capable than these women "knew" themselves to be.
Rather than offering assurance, each new achievement and subsequent
challenge only served to intensify the ever-present fear of being...
Found Out
"Oh my God," I thought, "I've been unmasked!"
Clearly flustered, I quickly scanned the room checking to see if anyone
had caught me nodding in dismayed recognition. No one had. They were
too busy bobbing their own heads in like-minded unison.
It's hard to describe what it was like to discover that these vague
feelings of self-doubt, angst and intellectual fraudulence had a name.
This, along with
the realization that I was not alone, was utterly liberating.
This experience
proved to be a profound turning point in my life, both academically and
personally. I made the life altering decision to change
dissertation topics in order to study how and why so many intelligent
women set themselves up to fall short.
I completed my dissertation in 1985. From here I set out to share what
I'd learned with fellow "impostors" – both men and women alike – all
over the country.
Little did I know then just how many of us there are…
Over 30,000 people have attended How to Feel As Bright and Capable As
Everyone Seems to Think You Are: What Every Woman and Man Needs to Know
About Competence, the Impostor Syndrome, and the Art of Winging It.
The people I’ve worked with come from all walks of life. They are
doctors and nurses, educators and college students, lawyers and
accountants, executives and administrative assistants, engineers and
administrators, human service providers and human resource managers,
computer programmers and program directors, architects and artists,
police officers and principals.
What they share in common is a deep desire to understand why, in the
face of often overwhelming evidence to the contrary, they continue to
doubt themselves, their competence, and their abilities.
Most importantly though, they want to discover how to overcome their
deep-seated feelings of self-doubt so they may finally come to see
themselves as the bright, capable people they really are!
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Outside the career
box expert, Valerie Young, PhD abandoned her corporate cubicle to
become
the Dreamer in Residence at ChangingCourse.com offering resources
to help you discover your life mission and live it.
Her career change
tips have been cited in Kiplinger’s, The Wall Street Journal, USA Today
Weekend, Woman’s Day, and elsewhere and on-line at MSN, CareerBuilder,
and iVillage.com.
An expert on the
Impostor Syndrome, Valerie has spoken on the topic of How to Feel
as Bright and Capable as Everyone Seems to Think You Are to such
diverse organizations as Daimler Chrysler, Bristol-Meyers Squibb,
Harvard, and American Women in Radio and Television.
To learn more about her enlightening and entertaining workshops, and
about her various CDs, workbooks and other career-related resources,
visit Changing Course
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Related Talent
Development Resources pages:
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articles
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