Tuesday, May 19, 2020
Fake It Til You Make It
Fake It Til You Make It Embed from Getty Imageswindow.gie=window.gie||function(c){(gie.q=gie.q||[]).push(c)};gie(function(){gie.widgets.load({id:'SAz09s_HS4drXVpMRQblBw',sig:'tNbJMkSzp4zgQWQRFtBsTWS0sTWwMyYc8jdv0o8Rt-s=',w:'337px',h:'507px',items:'78323098',caption: false ,tld:'com',is360: false })}); Valerie Young is the author of The Secret Thoughts of Successful Women: Why Capable People Suffer from the Impostor Syndrome and How to Thrive in Spite of It. Among her lessons for (mostly) women who suffer from Impostor Syndrome is âlearn to fake it.â Young spends considerable time on the subject of why men suffer less often and less deeply from feeling like impostors. One skill men develop early, she writes, is the ability to â" well â" letâs call it a business-like pseudonym: âBluffing Strategically,â or B.S. For her purposes, Young defines B.S. as âgiving the impression that Iâm more competent than I really am.â Men start the behavior early as they play games. âBoys grow up learning how to exaggerate. More happened in the backseat of the car with the girl than really did. The fish was âthis big.â When you grow up playing sports, you learn that bluffing and exaggerating are part of the game. You learn to fake a pass, to fool the other team by changing up your play, and to use bravado to psych out your opponent and âget inside his head.â Girls donât have an equivalent to this behavior, Young writes. In fact, theyâll renegotiate the rules if one player struggles in a game â" they value relationships over rules. Boys almost never change the rules weaker players just have to learn to keep up. In my experience, thatâs why boys learn to bluff early â" youâll never get invited to play with the bigger, better athletes if you doubt your ability. Bluff your way in and hope you get lucky. Meanwhile, you learn and improve by mixing it up with guys who are better than you. Girls, on the other hand, tend to watch wistfully from the sidelines, thinking âI wish I could do that.â Young writes, âEven in the animal kingdom, survival of the fittest often means that the male of the species has to appear bigger than he really is. âDisplay behavior,â as it is known, is used to attract females and ward off rival males. Two-legged males also recognize the value of such behavior.â She says that the whole B.S. phenomenon became clear to her while watching Ted Koppel one night. A guest asked him: ââDo you ever feel you donât know enough about a subject to ask the tough questions?â Koppelâs answer forever changed how I looked at the world. He said: âNo. When I can, Iâd rather go into a program knowing as much as possible about the subject, but I donât consider it a handicap [when] I know next to nothing.â But, Young writes, it was the next sentence that changed her feeling about the subject forever. âI figure I can] pick up enough information in a short period of time to be able to b****hit my way with the best of them.â Unapologetic. Iâll fake it if I have to. Sure, I can give the impression that Iâm more competent than I really am, and itâs pretty great that I can pull it off! Most women, Young says, tend to recoil from that attitude. It feels dishonest, inauthentic. So, she challenges us: âOkay, then what are some ways of describing what Koppel meant that you would feel more comfortable with? What about winging it ⦠holding your own ⦠rolling with the conversation ⦠being in the moment ⦠trusting your instincts ⦠improvising? What you call it doesnât matter. What is important is recognizing that there are times in life when you have to be able to fly by the seat of your pantsâ"and that this kind of going with the flow can be very freeing.â She encourages women to act as if they were the capable, talented, deserving woman everyone seems to think they are. Say yes first, get in there and try it. You might get lucky. Or you might be really good. Youâll never know unless you try. How do you feel about faking it âtil you make it? Leave a comment and let me know.
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