Recently, I attended a public speaking event designed for professionals seeking to elevate their communication skills. For the longest time, I believed the most daunting aspect of public speaking was stepping onto that stage, standing alone, face to face with your own emotions and a room full of attentive eyes. But during the feedback session, one participant shared something that deeply resonated with me. She said she wasn’t afraid of speaking in public; rather, she felt she had nothing valuable to say.
How curious it is that we can view ourselves as unworthy of attention, as though we lack anything meaningful to offer. That perhaps we’re simply not “interesting enough.” It struck me as a subtle, yet powerful manifestation of imposter syndrome, the belief that others are more capable, more deserving, while we are somehow not enough.
It’s a quiet but common presence, showing up in both professional settings and personal moments, quietly convincing us that we somehow fall short.
Here is my own humble recipe for overcoming this mindset:
Embrace your confidence, impostor syndrome fades the moment you own your worth and step fully into your story.