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10
Steps to Overcome the Impostor Syndrome
By
Dr. Valerie Young
1. Break the silence.
Shame keeps a lot of people from “fessing up” about their fraudulent
feelings. Knowing there’s a name for these feelings and that you are
not alone can be tremendously freeing.
2. Separate
feelings from fact. There are times you’ll feel stupid. It
happens to everyone from time to time. Realize that just because you
may feel stupid, doesn’t mean you are.
3. Recognize when
you should feel fraudulent. If you’re one of the first or the
few women or minorities in your field or work place it’s only natural
you’d sometimes feel like you don’t totally fit in.
Instead
of taking
your self-doubt as a sign of your ineptness, recognize that it might be
a normal response to being an outsider.
4. Accentuate the
positive. Perfectionism can indicate a healthy drive to excel.
The trick is to not obsess over everything being just so. Do a great
job when it matters most. Don’t persevere over routine tasks. Forgive
yourself when the inevitable mistake happens.
5. Develop a new
response to failure and mistake making. Henry Ford once said,
“Failure is only the opportunity to begin again more intelligently.”
Instead
of beating yourself up for being human for blowing the big
project, do what professional athletes do and glean the learning value
from the mistake and move on.
6. Right the rules.
If you’ve been operating under misguided rules like, “I should always
know the answer,” or “Never ask for help” start asserting your rights.
Recognize
that you have just as much right as the next person to be
wrong, have an off-day, or ask for assistance.
7. Develop a new
script. Your script is that automatic mental tapes that starts
playing in situations that trigger your Impostor feelings.
When
you
start a new job or project for example, instead of thinking for
example, “Wait till they find out I have no idea what I’m doing,” try
thinking, “Everyone who starts something new feels off-base in the
beginning. I may not know all the answers but I’m smart enough to find
them out.”
8. Visualize
success. Do what professional athletes do. Spend time beforehand
picturing yourself making a successful presentation or calmly posing
your question in class. It sure beats picturing impending disaster and
will help with performance-related stress.
9. Reward yourself.
Break the cycle of continually seeking °© and then dismissing
°© validation outside of yourself by learning to pat yourself
on the back.
10. Fake it ‘til you
make it. Now and then we all have to fly by the seat of our
pants. Instead of considering “winging it” as proof of your ineptness
learn to do what many high achievers do and view it as a skill.
Don’t
wait until you feel confident to start putting yourself out there.
Courage comes from taking risks. Change your behavior first and allow
your confidence to build.
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Also see more articles
by Valerie Young
 Since escaping her corporate job in 1995 to
found Changing Course, "Dreamer in Residence" Dr. Valerie Young's
career advice has appeared around the
world...
Changing Course programs include:
Finding Your True
Calling
Impostor
Syndrome Self-Help Workshop
Making
Dreams Happen Audio Program
Profiting From Your
Passions Coach Program
See the main site for more programs, articles and other resources :
Changing Course
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This is a publication of Talent Development Resources
Also see Personal
Growth Information
- ebooks, CD programs and personal development sites
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Related Talent
Development Resources pages:
Impostor
syndrome....
Impostor syndrome 2 : quotes articles books
Self-criticism......
Self-esteem
/ self
concept...Pg
2..Pg 3..Pg 4
Self-esteem/concept
resources sites books...
Self
concept / self esteem
articles
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