ISBN-13: 9783565203550 / Angielski / Miękka / 220 str.
Imposter syndrome isn't about lacking skills or achievements-it's about how you interpret them. It's the gap between what others see and what you feel. Every success gets explained away: luck, timing, help from others, lowered standards. Meanwhile, every mistake confirms what you secretly believe: that you're not actually qualified to be here.This book explores why some people develop imposter syndrome while others don't, examining the role of perfectionism, early messages about worth, belonging uncertainty, and identity conflicts. It draws on research around attribution theory, self-concept, and social comparison to reframe imposter syndrome not as evidence of fraud but as a pattern of self-protection against the vulnerability of being seen as capable.Rather than offering strategies to "fake it until you make it" or boost confidence artificially, it examines what happens when achievement becomes evidence against you instead of for you. It explores questions like: What if your imposter feelings aren't warnings but habits of self-doubt you learned long ago? What if owning your competence feels threatening because it means losing the safety of staying small? What if you're not a fraud-you're just afraid of what happens if people expect more?For those who've succeeded despite chronic self-doubt, who attribute achievements to external factors, or who fear being "found out," this book offers validation and a way to recognize yourself in your own accomplishments.
You're not a fraud waiting to be exposed-you're competent but still waiting for permission to believe it.