lifehackers
Thursday, 30 October 2014
Whenever You Compare Yourself to Someone on Social Media, Set a Goal
Whenever You Compare Yourself to Someone on Social Media, Set a Goal
People only post the best parts of their lives on social media, so it's easy to find ourselves making comparisons. Next time, figure out whether your feelings are telling you to get better at something, and set a goal to do so.
Maybe you wish you had a better relationship with your family, or were more health conscious, and see other people doing these things and it makes you feel low. There's really no end to what we could compare ourselves to on these sites, but the comparisons can be reshaped into something positive.
Tiny Buddha explains how these moments, when you compare yourself to others, might be an opportunity to see which areas of your life you really want to improve:
As unpleasant as these comparisons can feel, they can serve a positive purpose in that they inform us of an area of our lives that may benefit from some improvement. The incident served as a reminder that I want to be secure enough in who I am and where I am in life that I don't feel the need to measure it in comparison to anyone else (least of all, a stranger).
After my strong reaction to a stranger's Facebook profile, I decided to work on developing a stronger sense of confidence and self-worth. I've done this in a number of different ways such as:- Putting a higher value on my relationships. I have amazing friends and family, but I admit that I often take them for granted. I've tried to become more present in my interactions with them, as well as in encounters with complete strangers.
- Valuing my time more. In the past, I've been much more cognizant and respectful of others' time than my own. I'm practicing putting my needs first and learning to accept that it is okay to do.
- Doing more of what I love. Sounds simple, but I've really made an effort to go on quiet walks with my dog more or allow myself an hour to read a book. Doing things simply because I like to do them has given me an increasing amount of self-value.
- Eating well and moving. I make sure to put my body in motion for at least thirty minutes a day (even if it's just walking the dog), and I eat small, healthy meals throughout the day so I don't find myself snacking mindlessly on junk. Putting a higher value on my body by eating clean and getting exercise has naturally given me a higher sense of self worth.
Strategies for Cultivating a Mindset of Financial Independence
Strategies for Cultivating a Mindset of Financial Independence
As I've stated many times, Sarah and I have a
central goal of financial independence at the earliest possible age.
Financial independence, to us, means that the requirement of money in
exchange for our work becomes entirely optional, leaving us to choose
options for our work based entirely on our own skills and personal joy.
Considering our twenties were disastrous from a financial standpoint,
we're aiming to be able to achieve this goal in our mid-forties or so - a
decade down the road, if all goes well.
This post originally appeared at The Simple Dollar.The biggest challenge of adopting such an enormous goal is that the only way to actually achieve it is to change your mindset. That enormous goal needs to underline how you look at the world and the decisions you make.
That can be a difficult transition. When you commit to saving a major portion of your household income each year, you're choosing to live in a way that's likely significantly different than how you were raised and also significantly different than how the vast majority of Americans live.
You have to think a little differently - and the only way to do that is to cultivate a different mindset.
Over the last several years, I've spent an awful lot of my time cultivating that mindset - unintentionally at first, and then, eventually, with full intention. I've read mountains of books on self-improvement, personal finance, and psychology. In the end, I've found a handful of practices that really work well in terms of cultivating that kind of mindset.
What Do You Want Most from Your Life?
Every single day, I spend at least a few minutes thinking about what I want from my life. By that, I don't just mean the rest of the day or tomorrow or the weekend. I think about things like what my children will tell my grandchildren about me or what might be said in my eulogy or the sum total of people I've positively impacted during my time on this earth.
Those are big, weighty things and they can be hard to really think about. So much of our future is shrouded in a mist of uncertainty. We often don't know exactly what our life will be like tomorrow, let alone in five years or in twenty.
What we can think about are principles. When someone describes you in a single sentence at the end of your life, how will they describe you? When you leave this world, will you have left a positive impact on a lot of lives? How will you achieve those things?
When you spend your time thinking about the short term - today, tomorrow, this weekend - it becomes a lot easier to justify expenses. This weekend might be a lot cooler or better if I bought this item or went on this trip.
When you spend your time thinking about the long term - your big objectives over the rest of your life - those expenses start seeming a lot less meaningful. Does a new dress for the party this weekend really matter very much? What really matters is the relationships you build there - and if those relationships don't matter, why go?
How Do Your Daily Choices Work Toward That Life?
Still, I'm human. When I'm already in the mindset of thinking about the big patterns in my life, I can't help but want to relate them to those short-term things - today, tomorrow, this weekend. Sometimes, they can seem unrelated.
What I try to do is think through things that happened in the last few days and the things I intend to do in the near future with those big ideals in mind. I'm going to the store tomorrow. How will my choices there affect those bigger life goals?
I often walk through interactions I've had and have and purchasing decisions I have made and will make while trying to keep those big things in mind. I'll walk through a social interaction I had. Did I actually cultivate a relationship there? If not, why not? I'll walk through that upcoming trip to the store. What kinds of foods should I buy for my long-term goals? (Healthy ones, ideally at a low cost.) Should I spend my money on incidental things? (No.)
A lot of people do these kinds of mental walkthroughs - I know I've always done it, even when I was little. The difference is that I try to shadow those walkthroughs with my lifelong goals. I don't think about momentary or short-term pleasures when I'm doing this. I try to think about nothing but the long term and how the situation I'm thinking through helps me with my life goals.
Naturally, I don't always do everything in terms of the long term, but by thinking through these situations, I make a lot more choices and handle a lot more interactions with the eye toward the long term than I once did.
Learn How to Separate Needs and Wants
The vast, vast majority of things in our lives are wants. Because we're accustomed to an affluent life, we've come to believe that an awful lot of things in our lives are needs because we've become so used to having a want fulfilled.
When you step back and look at how many wants are fulfilled in our day-to-day lives, it's impossible not to feel incredibly blessed.
I really like how Jacob Lund Fisker explains this concept in his book Early Retirement Extreme, which I discussed recently. Here's what he has to say:
Consider, for example, shelter. Here the list of choices may look like this:I have family members and friends who have lived at level three and four on this list and they're perfectly functional, wonderful people. I live somewhere around level seventeen. The difference between the two is just the fulfillment of a lot of wants.
1. Sleeping under open air.
2. Sleeping under a tarp, bascha, or hootchie.
3. Living in a tent.
4. Couch surfing.
5. Living in a shack or a cabin.
6. Living in a ship cabin or a truck cab.
7. Living in a car or a boat.
8. Living in an RV.
9. Sharing a room with other people.
10. Having your own room.
11. Sharing an apartment with other people.
12. Having your own apartment.
13. Sharing a home with other people.
14. ...
On this scale there is no demarcation of when a need becomes a want. Each step is slightly different and slightly more expensive than the previous step, with no indication of what the bare minimum is, other than having a place to sleep.
Now, I'm not advocating that people live in tents like hermits. That's not the point. The point is that if you stop and reflect on your life from this perspective, you begin to see the huge number of wants we have fulfilled on a daily basis and how truly rich and wonderful our lives really are.
I have so much. I have a wonderful big house to live in that is shared only with people I dearly love. Why would I want more? I have a dresser full of well-fitting clothes that look reasonably good on me. Why would I want more? I have more board games that I'll likely ever be able to play to the point that they're "boring" or "routine." The same is probably true for books. I eat amazing meals multiple times a day.
My life is amazing. Why do I need to keep throwing money at more and more and more wants?
Spend some time each day reflecting on all of the things that you have in your life that fulfill wants. Make some lists like that list of housing options. Consider the line where you personally differentiate between "need" and "want" and then reflect on where you find yourself. You have so much.
Whenever I think through this, I begin to realize how much money I spend on pure wants that don't really add anything significant to my life. If I spend money, it either needs to take care of a basic need, take care of someone else I care about, or extend some core value of my life. If I'm not doing one of those three things, the expense feels pretty empty.
Separate Your Desires from the Desires of Others
The most powerful trick that advertisers and marketers use is that they mess with the line between want and need. They pull in peer pressure, the need for self-actualization, the need for love and to be loved, and many other things and use those to convince us that some thing is a need - or much closer to it than you might have thought. They actively try to alter your desires to match what they want, in other words. This doesn't just happen in advertisements; it occurs in "news" stories, product placements within other programs, and countless other ways.
In a less pernicious way, the people around you do the same thing. When you see someone else feeling pride or happiness, it's a normal human reaction to want to feel those things as well. When you see what has triggered those feelings, it's a normal human reaction to desire whatever it is that triggered those feelings. We want to "keep up" with them. We want to feel good like they do. We may even want to "beat" them in some fashion.
The end result of both of these things is an alteration of our own desires. We suddenly desire something we didn't desire before. A very minor desire is suddenly amplified into a much bigger one. A nonexistent desire can suddenly bubble into something you must have or must experience.
There are a lot of ways to deal with this and I'm going to mention a few more below, but one very useful strategy is to simply think about your current strong "wants" and ask yourself why you want them. Think about the one or two things you want most right now and ask why you want those items. Then go further - what about that item do you not want? The price tag? Some attribute of the item?
The more you do this, the more you get in tune with what you personally want, separate from others. Often, that list of wants is much smaller, meaning you're less likely to spend money and time on things that aren't deeply meaningful to you, and much clearer, meaning the things you do spend money on will have deeper meaning to you.
Research All of Your Purchases
Whenever you make a major purchase - and I define "major" as anything over $20 or so - it's well worth spending time in advance of the purchase researching that purchase.
No matter what the purchase is, I'll try to learn more about the specific product I'm buying as well as any significant competitors. I'll look for multiple comparative reviews that puts the various options side by side and runs them through their paces. Once I'm sure of the one or two or three options I'd be willing to buy, I spend time shopping around for the best price I can find both online and offline.
This can be a rabbit hole of time, of course. I usually break it up over several short sessions. I'll find some comparative reviews and read them during one session. I'll find some more during another one. In between, I'll think about what exactly I want from the item. I'll then spend a session or two shopping around for that item, often adding it to price-tracking tools like CamelCamelCamel.
Why? If I'm going to spend my money on something, I want to get something worthwhile for that money. I want something I'll actually use. I want something that will actually last. I want something that is going to provide an excellent experience for the price.
I even advocating researching small, regular purchases. It's well worth spending some time reading magazines like Consumer Reports and knowing what their "best buy" recommendations are for your common purchases, from paper towels to garbage bags and everything else.
Taking this effort ensures that when you spend money on non-spontaneous stuff, you're getting good stuff at a good price. This should be a completely natural thing, too.
Take Your Time and Be Patient
It is really, really easy to get impatient in life, today more than ever. With so much information available at a click of the mouse, it's easy to get frustrated when the answers we want aren't present immediately. It's easy to get frustrated when the changes we want don't happen incredibly quickly.Financial independence uses a mindset that is almost entirely the opposite of that. Financial independence is all about the long term. It's about patience. It's about taking your time. It's about being willing to move slowly toward something big that really matters instead of moving quickly toward something small that doesn't matter as much.
There are countless specific practices you can use to improve your patience. Active listening is one. Note-taking is another (and I'll hit on that one again in a minute). Forcing yourself to slow down is yet another one. Different practices seem to work well for different people.
In the end, your focus should be on doing things well more than doing things quickly. Naturally, that's not always an option, especially in professional situations, but you should strive to do that again and again at every opportunity in your life.
For example, in conversation, instead of just rushing from your point to your next point, actively listen to the other person and respond to what they're saying instead of just pushing your ideas out there. It takes longer, but it makes for a better conversation and a much deeper connection.
When you're repairing a toilet, take the time to make sure everything is well connected and cleaned up well. It takes longer, but the repair will last far longer and the bathroom will look better, too.
When you're doing the dishes, take the time to load the dishwasher properly. It takes longer, but the dishes will wind up cleaner and you'll also spend less time later reloading the dishwasher.
Practicing patience in the little things in life like this ends up gradually cultivating patience in other areas of life. As with the other steps in this article, it's not an immediate transformation, but every step in a more patient direction makes achieving financial independence just a little bit easier.
Educate Yourself Daily
Spend at least a little time each day learning something new about the world on a deeper level than a tweet or a news article. This practice is beneficial in several ways.
One, it teaches you something new about the world. That in itself is a good thing. No matter what you learn, you improve your understanding of the world around you.
Two, it gives you material to draw upon when you're trying to understand other topics. Our world is interconnected in so many ways. The more you understand about a variety of things in our world, the easier it is to understand other things as they're presented to you. You can make sense of things much easier.
Three, it forces you to think. To understand a new idea requires you to use your mind in a powerful way. Your mind is like a muscle in that the more you use it, the stronger it becomes. Learning something new is much like a powerful workout at the gym, except that it is your mind that is growing. It becomes much easier to learn other things if you're familiar with the practice of learning.
Four, it can open up new avenues for earning money. Whenever you learn a new skill or become more proficient in a certain area, you become more likely to be able to capitalize on that skill or knowledge. At the very least, it can help you keep the expense of specialists at bay.
Finally, it can open up new avenues of personal interest. Areas that previously seemed dull can gradually be illuminated and become exciting to you as you learn. I've found myself taking on a serious interest in many things that I would have scoffed at earlier on in my life.
Personally, I spend some time each day (usually) reading an article or a section of a book that is either a factual presentation of something I don't know much about (and would like to know) or presents a perspective on an issue that's different than what I think or what I'm normally exposed to. I try to take notes on that article or book section as I read because I've found that I recall things much better if I write them down with my own hand.
I usually try to spend some time at least a few times a week on learning a new skill. I'll figure out how to repair something or how to install a level shelf or how to play a musical instrument.
This process enriches my life in many dimensions. I'm much more willing to do things for myself. I'm much more willing to explore the world around me. I'm much more willing to try things outside of my comfort zone. All of those things point in the direction of financial independence.
Maximize Appreciation of the Free Things in Life
For me, this seemed to naturally evolve from some of the other practices on this list, particularly when I took on the practice of learning new things and new skills every day and when I started seriously examining the line between needs and wants and realizing how much bounty my life contained.
It doesn't cost me a thing to experience the warmth of sun on my neck or the touch of coolness that comes from the breeze.
It doesn't cost me a thing to go exploring in the woods and finding interesting things, like an ancient graveyard or an old house or a pond.
It doesn't cost me a thing to do a bunch of bodyweight exercises and feel the endorphins rushing through my system.
It doesn't cost me a thing to meditate or to pray and lose myself in the power of the moment.
It doesn't cost me a thing to pull out an old board game from my shelf and play it or to pull out an old book from my shelf and read it. It doesn't cost me a thing to check out a book from the library, either.
It doesn't cost me a thing to start a collection of rocks I've found or of birds I've seen or of geocaches I've located or of mushrooms I've spotted.
It doesn't cost me a thing to kiss my wife or hold my youngest son or make my daughter laugh that wonderful laugh that she has.
The more I engage in all of those things, the more I realize how much beauty and depth and joy they contain and how much they bring to my life.
It leaves me wondering why I spend money on so many of the things that I do. And that leaves me spending a lot less money. And that leads, unsurprisingly, to achieving a lot of financial goals.
Build Reinforcing Relationships
When you think about the other elements of this article, ask yourself this: is this how the other people in your life think and behave?
Do the people around you actively listen to you when you talk to them? Do they spend their time trying to learn new things? Are they careful about their purchases? Do they like to engage in things that don't cost money, whether they're with you or in other situations?
People like that already have most of the elements of a mindset of financial independence. It's present from their behavior.
If you wish to cultivate a similar mindset, those are the people you should be spending time with and building a strong relationship with.
Why? The people you spend time with rub off on you. Many of their habits and interests and quirks integrate themselves into your own life. If a friend of yours spends a lot of time on a hobby, chances are that you'll at the very least be more aware of that hobby. If a friend of yours practices certain daily rituals, the chances are greater that they'll seem normal and inviting to you as well.
Evaluate the people in your life and see whether or not they are living lives that point toward financial independence and personal growth. When you find people that are, make an extra effort to build a stronger relationship with those people.
Doing so will give you friends who listen, friends who won't encourage you to spend money on needless things all the time, and friends who will often have valuable insights into all kinds of things in life. Their behavior will rub off, too.
Final Thoughts
Financial independence is most successful when it's not something you hold at a distance in your life. Instead, it becomes integrated into everything you do, becoming a part of your day-to-day choices even when those choices seem to have little to do with money.It's not an on-and-off switch, either. It's a gradual process. No one should drop all of their friends, change all of their hobbies, and completely alter their time use all at once - that's not healthy.
Instead, draw on these steps little by little throughout your life. Bookmark this page (or save this email) and look at it regularly. When it comes into your mind, try some of these practices. Be patient with a purchase. Learn something new today... and then again tomorrow. Call up a friend who exhibits some good financial independence traits and invite them over for dinner. Go for a walk in the woods and appreciate the beauty around you.
All of these steps build on themselves and reinforce each other, gradually changing how you see the world.
Overcoming Impostor Syndrome: What to Do When You Feel Like a Fraud
Overcoming Impostor Syndrome: What to Do When You Feel Like a Fraud
Everyone feels it at some point in their professional life: I'm a fraud and everyone is about to find out. It's healthy to question your own qualifications and take pause, but then you need to find a way to move forward and regain your confidence.
What is impostor syndrome? It's feeling like an impostor when you're not. Like you're a fraud and the whole world is going to find you out. This makes total sense for undercover agents and people selling snake oil. It doesn't make so much sense for people who are trying to make the world a little better or to sell something they believe in.
It's comforting to hear when famous high achievers feel the same way:
"The beauty of the impostor syndrome is you vacillate between extreme egomania and a complete feeling of: 'I'm a fraud! Oh God, they're on to me! I'm a fraud!' So you just try to ride the egomania when it comes and enjoy it, and then slide through the idea of fraud." - Tina Fey
"There are an awful lot of people out there who think I'm an expert. How
do these people believe all this about me? I'm so much aware of all the
things I don't know." Dr. Chan, Chief of the World Health Organization
"I still think people will find out that I'm really not very talented. I'm really not very good. It's all been a big sham." - Michelle Pfeifer
"Sometimes I wake up in the morning before going off to a shoot, and I think, I can't do this. I'm a fraud." - Kate Winslett
"I have written eleven books, but each time I think, 'uh oh, they're going to find out now. I've run a game on everybody, and they're going to find me out.' " - Maya Angelou
Emma Watson, Sheryl Sandberg, and Sonia Sotomayor have also admitted to feeling like they'll be found out for the frauds they are.
Seth Godin wrote in The Icarus Deception that after a dozen best sellers he still feels like a fraud all the time. This problem is only getting worse as more of us are tied to our online presences; we're in this weird culture where you've got to sell yourself aggressively while remaining "authentic." You think you need to be perfect but you also need to feel free to fail. You need to be yourself and more! Trying to be sincere while being self-conscious of how you present yourself can make you feel like a fraud. Here are the ways I keep going when I feel like a fraud:
17 Ways To Overcome Impostor Syndrome
1. Come off it.Usually I feel like a fraud when I think I'm more important than I am. When you feel like a fraud it's in relation to some perfection that never actually existed. Letting go of some of your excess self-importance will go a long way in helping you feel less like a fake.
2. Accept that you have had some role in your successes.
We feel like frauds because we are "unable to internalize our successes." We were given an opportunity that others weren't. And so nothing we achieve after that opportunity was actually deserved.
John D. Rockefellar's oldest son felt that strongly. His entire life's work was giving away money that his dad made. Can you imagine the intense impostor syndrome he must have felt? Holy moly.
There are plenty of people born with a silver spoon that still manage to fuck up. They were given every opportunity and never could take advantage of them. Opportunities come to those who expose themselves to them.
It's not all "fair," not at all. But you did do something to get where you are. You said yes when you could have said no (or perhaps in a more challenging situation, you said no when you could have said yes).
3. Focus on providing value.
I feel like a fraud when I'm concerned about myself. What will they think of me? If I fail they'll shun me. I don't know as much as that other guy, I have no right to say anything on the topic. Blah blah blah. The fastest way to get over feeling like a fraud is to genuinely try to help someone else.
This is hard because what if they hate you for it? What if they make fun of you for trying to help? What if your sincerity is smashed under the laughter of others? Then OUCH! That hurts bad. Not nearly as bad as it hurts to feel like a shell of yourself though. I remember the first time I wrote vulnerably. I had gone through severe depression and had benefitted from reading about others being depressed. I felt obligated to share my story. It's a couple years later now and I still get emails telling me how helpful the letter was to them. Not one person made fun of me for that. At least to my face.
4. Keep a file of people saying nice things about you.
I just started this earlier this year and it's been amazing. Every time someone writes that I helped them online I take a screenshot and put it in my folder. When I feel like a fraud I can go look through the stories of people I have helped. There is a mom who's 18 year old boy was shaken out of being stuck because of something I had written. There are a whole series of entrepreneurs who started businesses because of articles I've written. There are successful entrepreneurs that were reinvigorated by something I wrote. There are a whole slew of people at rock bottom who have found life worth living again because of something I wrote. Those things keep me putting stuff out there. Because, honestly, it's easy to forget that writing can do any good. Collect your wins, testimonials, whatever and then visit them when you're feeling like a fraud.
5. Stop comparing yourself to that person.
There's no good reason for you to be reading what I'm writing. There are world class biographies of Warren Buffett, John D. Rockefeller, and Einstein. James Altucher has had more successes than me. Peter Thiel just wrote a book. Tim Ferriss, Paul Graham, Kevin Kelly... these guys blog! But still, I'm writing this because I think I have something to offer. Actually, when I look at my praise file I have proof that I have something to offer.
When I compare myself to these others it's easy to fall into the trap of "my life sucks compared to that life." You might as well not even do anything! Your life isn't the best life! Emerson said, "Envy is ignorance..." and he was right on. You aren't here to live the life of another person. You're here to do whatever life you can. Turn Facebook off, get off Instagram, stop reading biographies of "successful" people and learn to respect your own experience. You're not a fraud, you're just you.
6. Expose yourself totally.
Part of the twisted arrogance that causes impostor syndrome is the (usually unconscious) belief that you have extreme powers that the world couldn't handle. Or maybe it's just that you think you are a freak. You certainly have the ability to offer the world something that nobody else can... but really it's not that wild! You are not nearly as much of a freak as you think you are. Again, come off it, you're just not that special.
Try this: write for 30 minutes the most insane things about yourself. You will never show anybody this. Write your most ridiculous beliefs, your most terrible thoughts, your biggest fraud! Just write gibberish if you think that is crazy. Push into the deepest taboos you hold. Seeing these on paper doesn't get rid of them but externalizing things puts them in a more sane perspective.
Alternatively, try stream-of-conscious writing. Write for 30 minutes nonstop. You can't put your pen down. If there is no thought in your head then write "I can't think of anything" until you do. This will constantly put you in touch with what's going on inside yourself.
It's very useful to let your mind wander, and it might help to show you how silly impostor syndrome is.
7. Treat the thing as a business or experiment.
Today there is a whole slew of artist-entrepreneurs. We call part of what we do "content creation." There has never been a time in history where so many people have a voice. No wonder we're all suffering from impostor syndrome.
Start treating your art as a business. Not to the point that you start making crap because it's what people like, but to the point that you are honestly trying to serving your area of the market. In a business, if a product doesn't sell, you stop making it.
If nobody shares this post or leaves comments then I'll assume that nobody wants to hear me talk about impostor syndrome-so I'll stop. I won't wallow in my failure and think the world hates me. I'm running a test. Looking at it this way makes it easier to create the thing freely, even if everything isn't a smash hit.
8. Remember: being wrong doesn't make you a fake.
The best basketball players miss most of the shots they take. The best traders lose money on most trades. Presidents are wrong about stuff all the time. The best football teams inevitably lose. Losing is just part of the game. Don't glorify failure, but don't let it make you feel like you're not a real contender either.
9. "Nobody Belongs Here More Than You.
" That's the title of Miranda July's collection of stories-which I haven't read, but I agree with it. Why do we feel we don't deserve to be in the game? Because we haven't won it yet? We haven't even tried! Break people down into what they are: expiring meat sacks.
We are all going to die, we just take different routes to get there. One of the most attractive qualities in a person is acceptance. Acceptance of themselves and acceptance of you. If you can admit that nobody belongs here more than you (while maintaining the belief that you don't belong here any more than anyone else) you will find yourself making connections with people in powerful ways.
Do you want to be on your deathbed regretting that you spent your entire life stopping yourself because you felt like a fraud? Maybe you can't shake the feeling that you're a fraud. You can force yourself to move forward despite the feeling.
10. Realize that when you hold back, you're robbing the world.
If you walk around feeling that you should be someone else or that you don't deserve to be here, then all your bad vibes rub off on other people. Your stunted expression means that you can't be there for people who need you.
Everyone has doubts, the best gift you can give the world is to move forward regardless of the doubts-because it gives us the permission to move forward as well.
11. Say what you can.
We are often put in the position of "expert." When this happens, people look at you like you should know everything about a topic. We can't know everything about everything though. If I'm in a situation where there is potential to actually be a fraud-i.e. bullshit about things I don't know-I just say what I can, as limited as it may be, and be honest with my limitations. People respect this much more. Admit that you don't yet have the answer but you'll find it.
12. Realize that nobody knows what they're doing.
Most startups fail. Even the ones that you hear about raising millions of dollars fail all the time. Nobody knows exactly what's going on. There are a ton of people who will tell you they know the answers. These people are liars.
The world we live in is the result of a lot of brave people tinkering, failing, and succeeding once in a while. Nobody knows what's next: some are willing to play ball in the face of uncertainty and some aren't. You're not an impostor for trying something that might not work.
13. Realize that you are not a constant.
You're constantly changing. You're constantly becoming a new person. Your opinions change with new information (I hope). You spend six months eating donuts and then you spend six months at the gym. Last year you were obsessed with Call of Duty, now you don't understand video games. Maybe you were in a terrible mood this morning. Maybe you're a bit brighter now.
"There is as much difference between us an ourselves as there is between us and others." - Michel de Montaigne
You are growing into something different. You are getting better. How? By trying to do something better than you actually can. That's not a lie, that's valor.
14. Authenticity is a hoax.
What is being authentic? I'm not going to write to my grandma using the same words as I use to write to my sister. I'm not even going to emphasize the same interests I have. You represent yourself differently to different people all the time, without being dishonest.
There is no person you can be other than you. Ever. The impostor syndrome will have you believe that you are being inauthentic, or that you are a liar. If that's true then where is your true self? The impostor syndrome doesn't give an answer because it doesn't have one. Tell it to eff off and realize that unless you are literally lying to people, you are just being yourself.
15. See credentials for what they are.
They don't mean much. "Expert" means someone decided to call them that. "PhD" doesn't necessarily mean someone knows more than you, but it does mean they spent a lot of time in school. (And they likely do know way more than you about some very specific topic, of course.)
Don't measure yourself by credentials. It takes the focus away from actually doing good things, and it won't shut up the impostor syndrome for long either if you focus on what credentials you do or don't have.
16. Find one person to whom you can say, "I feel like a fraud.
" Being able to say that out loud to another person can be a huge help. Especially when they laugh at you for it-and then acknowledge that they feel the same way.
17. Realize that faking things actually does work.
Sometimes faking it doesn't make you a fraud. If you smile, your body will be more generous with happy chemicals and actually make you happier.
When you were a baby you tried to walk and fell down every time. Were you a walking impostor? Who are you to walk!? You can't even do it! It's absurd!
Silicon Valley has been built by people trying to do things that probably weren't going to work. We need them to keep trying. We need you to keep trying. We need you. Whether you feel like an impostor or not.
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