
The
Urge to Self-Destruct Puts You in Lofty Company
April 28,
2005
By James
Warren, Chicago Tribune
If you
secretly fret that others will discover you’re not as
brilliant as they assume, you may suffer from a purported
malady whose name suggests the analytical flexibility of the
psychology profession. Yes, you could be a victim of the
dreaded Impostor Syndrome.
According
to the May-June issue of Best Life (a magazine about
“what matters to men”), this syndrome may well explain
former Tyco boss Dennis Kozlowski’s disputed financial
dealings, West Wing producer Aaron Sorkin’s drug
bust, short-time University of Alabama football coach Mike
Price’s topless-bar escapade and New York Times scam
artist Jayson Blair’s phony reporting. They all goofed big
time as they reached certain lofty heights of their chosen
fields.
One social
psychologist, who is identified here as “an expert on the
subject,” informs us that the syndrome stems from low
self-esteem and the fact that success can bring gloom and
pressure because since “with every gain, there is also a
loss.”
So, if
you’re planning to run a Fortune 500 company, or coach a
famous sports team, “Get a good psychological screening for
depression, manic-depressive disorders, or substance abuse
if you suspect there’s a problem,” counsels Daniel Yohanna,
director of psychiatry at Northwestern University’s Feinberg
School of Medicine.
Of course,
how many folks who ascend the top of any institutional
mountain will concede failings of any consequence? But you
can take a brief quiz on the topic, with questions passed
along by Valerie Young, “a well-known authority on impostor
syndrome.” By the time you’re done, maybe you’ll be a
well-known authority, too, if not necessarily willing to
admit fatal imperfections.
The
Chicago Tribune is a Tribune Co. newspaper.
Copyright © 2005, South Florida
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