Smoking and Imposter Syndrome: Understanding the Connection

How Smoking 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 smoking.

The Smoking-Imposter Syndrome Cycle

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

Who Gets Imposter Syndrome with Smoking?

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 smoking is also common.

Breaking the Smoking-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 smoking

Related Resources

Bringwise

Turn psychology into daily habits

5 minutes a day. Science-backed insights you can actually use.

Download Free