Imposter syndrome involves feeling inadequate despite evidence of success, often accompanied by fear of being “exposed” as a fraud. It affects people across professions and backgrounds, particularly high achievers. Overcoming it requires acknowledging accomplishments objectively, challenging self-doubt with factual evidence, and normalizing the experience—most people feel this way at times. Sharing feelings with trusted mentors or peers reduces isolation, while focusing on growth rather than perfection fosters a healthier mindset.​

Imposter syndrome involves feeling inadequate despite evidence of success, often accompanied by fear of being “exposed” as a fraud. It affects people across professions and backgrounds, particularly high achievers. Overcoming it requires acknowledging accomplishments objectively, challenging self-doubt with factual evidence, and normalizing the experience—most people feel this way at times. Sharing feelings with trusted mentors or peers reduces isolation, while focusing on growth rather than perfection fosters a healthier mindset.​

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I walk past our old corner café, and my feet stop on their own. The sign still says “Open 7 AM,” just like it did when we’d meet here every Saturday, you with your black coffee, me with chai. I can almost see you through the window, grinning as you’d steal a sip of my drink. The barista recognizes me, asks if I want “the usual.” I shake my head, throat tight. Some places hold too much—too many smiles, too many “see you tomorrows” that turned into “goodbyes.” I keep walking, but my heart lingers, tracing the cracks in the sidewalk where we used to stand.

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