
Who Do You Think You Are?
Big success can make you feel so small
Wednesday, March 30, 2005
By Leslie Goldman
All eyes were on Liz Ryan as she took
the stage in New York to receive her “Stevie” award — the
business equivalent of an Oscar.
But as she accepted, Ryan, founder
and chief executive officer of WorldWIT, a women’s online
discussion community, was filled with doubt.
“Bill Rancic (of “The Apprentice”)
was handing me the award and I’m thinking, ‘Who the hell am
I? I’m just a mom with an overflowing laundry room and a
2-year-old with applesauce in his hair,’” remembers Ryan.
This wasn’t the first time doubts had
circulated through her mind.
Such thoughts go deeper than
deprecation or fleeting lapses in self-confidence. It’s an
issue some mental-health professionals call the Impostor
Syndrome, and it affects many highly successful women.
The syndrome was identified in 1978
by psychology professor Pauline Clance and psychologist
Suzanne Imes as a persistent belief in one’s lack of
intelligence, skill or competence.
It’s a sense of intellectual
fraudulence; the belief that one doesn’t deserve her
academic or career achievement and simply has been able to
fool others into believing in her abilities.
Arla Lisa McMillan, a
psychotherapist, says she sees a steady flow of Impostor
Syndrome clients.
It’s an exhausting way to live.
“Say you’re a successful banker,
sitting with a client, and they’re asking you questions and
you’re answering but you’re thinking, ‘There must be a
better answer.’
“You’re second-guessing yourself,
thinking any second you’re going to be discovered. You’re
constantly on guard.”
Businesswomen, who are achieving more
and more in spheres in which they previously didn’t exist,
are prime candidates.
“That is a set up for feelings of
inadequacy,” says McMillan.
Impostor Syndrome can be considered a
clinical phenomenon but not a psychiatric diagnosis.
What determines whether treatment is
needed is the degree, the intensity and whether it
interferes with one’s ability to complete daily tasks, says
psychiatrist Leslie Hartley Gise, clinical professor in the
department of psychiatry at the University of Hawaii.
“Who among us hasn’t doubted
ourselves at some point?” Gise says.
“All of these things in a mild form
are part of normal human experience. But if somebody is
staying three extra hours at work to prove they can make it,
it would more likely be a disorder and something they would
want to address.”
Arguably, Impostor Syndrome could be
a new label for old-fashioned insecurity or a lack of
self-confidence.
But some experts say the issue goes
deeper.
Valerie Young, a teacher who holds a
doctorate in education, says “impostors” come from all walks
of life and all career levels: physicians, nurses, lawyers,
educators, computer programmers and students.
The syndrome can be especially
rampant in historically male-dominated fields, such as
science and engineering, she says, or for first-generation
professionals “who feel the weight of being the
standard-bearer for their family or race in some cases.”
Young herself had felt like an
impostor until she put a name to the face in 1983 during a
graduate class.
“Somebody brought a paper into class
and started describing this syndrome — bright, capable women
who felt like they’d fooled others, managed to slip through
the system undetected.
“I looked around the room and saw all
the other women graduate students nodding their heads.”
She now teaches a workshop designed
to help women feel as capable as their success would suggest
they are.
For writer Jory Des Jardins, 32, the
syndrome first manifested itself several years ago, when her
articles were printed in major publications, including The
New York Times.
“When people got excited about my work, I’d think, ‘Oh, my
God, I can’t believe you read that article. I can’t believe
you thought it was good.’”
The syndrome later surfaced when Des
Jardins was promoted at a media startup.
“They were treating the job like it was brain surgery, and I
felt I had not done anything significant to earn it,” she
recalls.
Eventually, after a string of jobs
left her feeling perpetually dissatisfied, she sought
assistance from a career coach who asked if she had ever
heard of Impostor Syndrome.
“I Googled it and realized there are
a lot of people with it. No one who is senior vice president
of banking would want to admit she doesn’t feel up to
snuff.”
According to Young, three elements
are at the core of the syndrome: a warped definition of
competence; a complex view of success; and the way some
women respond to failure.
As for the competence aspect, Young
says, “Our internal bar is set way too high.”
The result: Anything short of a
flawless performance leaves perfectionists feeling
unsuccessful.
Consider Ryan, who started a software
company in 1999, which Motorola recently bought for $25
million.
Even though she hasn’t been involved
with the company for three years, she has been getting
congratulatory calls about the purchase.
“My first thought is, ‘Yes, it’s
great, but it took five years, it’s just a $25 million
sale.’
“A friend said, ‘What do you mean
just a $25 million sale? Why do you trivialize that?’”
Ryan theorizes that she may be prone
to discounting her accomplishments because she was raised to
believe tooting one’s own horn is unseemly.
This unreachable internal bar, Young
explains, also could be a result of being raised in a
society in which women often get the message that they are
worth less than men.
The syndrome often stays with women
even as they grow more successful, Young says.
One might assume that as a woman
achieves career goals her feelings of being a fraud
decrease. But for women with Impostor Syndrome, it’s just
the opposite.
“Now you have a reputation to defend;
the stakes are higher,” Young says.
Even actress Jennifer Aniston told
Vogue, “Without fail, the night before a photo shoot, I go,
‘Why do I think I’m allowed to be in a magazine?’ I just get
so terrified.”
The third component in Impostor
Syndrome is how women experience and respond to failure.
As Gise put it: “Women are at high
risk to overreacting to negative feedback or criticism.
“If somebody asked her to do
something again, she might feel like a failure; a man might
think, ‘That boss is a bastard, he has unreasonable
expectations.’”
To break out of the syndrome,
McMillan advises, women must identify the symptoms.
These include self-denigrating thoughts that always add up
to not feeling good enough: believing that others are
smarter; being easily discouraged; feelings of inadequacy;
negative self-talk; and inability to show vulnerability.
McMillan encourages women to counter
negative thoughts by writing down positive statements, such
as: “I did an excellent job on that report because I did a
great deal of research and knew the subject well.”
Another strategy is to ask oneself:
If my friend came to me with this, what would I say to her?
If the problem persists, it might be
useful to seek outside assistance, such as psychotherapy,
from a mental-health professional.
Getting help can be especially
crucial, McMillan says, as Impostor Syndrome can leave women
vulnerable to eating disorders, substance abuse or other
addictions.
For Des Jardins, addressing the
syndrome has freed her to enjoy life more.
That meant quitting her corporate job
to become a full-time writer and penning a
semi-autobiographical book.
For Ryan, it’s been a matter of
putting one foot in front of the other.
“I still doubt myself a million times
a day, but my success has been an incontrovertible thing.
That doesn’t fill whatever hole you have inside you, but it
tells you what the world sees.”
Even Young acknowledges that she
doesn’t think Impostor Syndrome ever really goes away.
“It’s a matter of replacing the old
pattern of thoughts and emotions,” she says.
“If Katie Couric asked me to be on
the ‘Today’ show, these feelings would still come up for me.
But I could calm myself down much faster and be excited for
myself.”
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