Lately, many of my conversations with clients have centered on a familiar theme: impostor syndrome.
It often shows up subtly—difficulty owning achievements, persistent self-doubt despite clear results, and a tendency to attribute success to luck or external factors. The inner critic gets louder, quietly holding people back from stepping into visibility or taking necessary risks.
Paradoxically, this pattern is most common among high performers. It frequently sits alongside perfectionism, overextension, and, at times, procrastination.
At its core, this isn’t about capability. It’s about a misalignment between competence and internal narrative.
So what helps shift it?
Start with awareness. Pay attention to your internal dialogue—and question where it comes from.
Create space to acknowledge your accomplishments. Reflect on challenges you’ve navigated. Write them down and keep those notes somewhere accessible, so you can return to evidence when doubt surfaces.
In those moments, pause and ask:
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What have I actually achieved today? Recognize even small accomplishments to keep grounded.
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What evidence supports my impostor thoughts? What is the reality?
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Am I being currently stretched beyond my comfort zone? Because growth rarely feels comfortable and that sense of uncertainty is temporary.
If this resonates, it may be worth exploring more intentionally. These patterns don’t shift on their own—but with awareness and the right support, they do shift.
