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Imposter syndrome is that quiet voice that tells you you’re a fraud, even when you’ve done the work, earned the seat, and shown up again and again.
It convinces you that your success was luck, that you’ll be “found out,” that everyone else knows something you don’t.
Overcoming it doesn’t mean silencing the voice completely. It means learning not to let it run the show.
You name it. You stop measuring yourself against people who aren’t living your life. You let experience, not fear, be the evidence.
You don’t become confident before you act. You become confident because you act.
And slowly, the voice loses its grip.

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I’ve learned that overcoming imposter syndrome isn’t a moment where it disappears and never comes back. For me, it’s been a process.
The voice still shows up sometimes, especially when I’m doing something new or visible. But I don’t let it decide for me anymore. I’ve stopped waiting to feel “ready” before I move.
I trust the fact that I’ve learned, grown, and earned my place, even on the days it doesn’t feel obvious.
What changed wasn’t confidence. It was my relationship with doubt. I stopped treating it like truth and started treating it like noise.
I still remind myself: feeling unsure doesn’t mean I don’t belong. It just means I’m stretching.
And that’s something I’m okay with now.