Self-Sabotage and Imposter Syndrome: Understanding the Connection

How Self-Sabotage and imposter syndrome interact — and how to address both.

Imposter syndrome — the persistent fear of being 'found out' as less capable than others believe — frequently co-occurs with and amplifies self-sabotage.

The Self-Sabotage-Imposter Syndrome Cycle

  • Self-Sabotage undermines confidence, making imposter thoughts more frequent and believable
  • Imposter syndrome creates chronic self-doubt that worsens self-sabotage
  • Overwork and perfectionism (imposter coping strategies) deplete resources needed to manage self-sabotage

Who Gets Imposter Syndrome with Self-Sabotage?

Imposter syndrome is most common in high achievers and in people from underrepresented groups in their field. It's particularly prevalent in academic and professional contexts where self-sabotage is also common.

Breaking the Self-Sabotage-Imposter Cycle

  • Keep an evidence file: Document compliments, successes, positive feedback
  • Separate feelings from facts: Feeling like an imposter doesn't make you one
  • Normalize it: Imposter syndrome is nearly universal among high achievers
  • Therapy: CBT effectively addresses both imposter syndrome and self-sabotage

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