I don't think I've ever had impostor syndrome. I'm like hi it's my first day lemme interrupt this VP in a meeting real quick
-
Show this thread
-
Replying to @sonyasupposedly
prevalence of IS scans as extremely fake. Extraordinary uptick suggests something. Perhaps too many people are doing fake work to begin with and its rly abt coping with that, or feeling that disconnect (outside prestige of field vs inside reality), than actually impostor-feeling.pic.twitter.com/JEwRLlYEPe
2 replies 2 retweets 104 likes -
Replying to @simonsarris @sonyasupposedly
In other words "Am I an impostor [and not actually good at this]?" seems much less likely to me than "Oh shit, are we all imposters, this entire line of work is phony, [and now I need to cope so lets find some medicalized language]."pic.twitter.com/xnxzIFcY3T
9 replies 11 retweets 121 likes -
As a STEM grad student, it’s a feeling of “I’m so hopelessly behind in basic knowledge and have no insight in the problems I study and I’ll never make a meaningful contribution to my field, in contrast to the other students and professors who make progress with ease”
1 reply 1 retweet 18 likes -
That just sounds like realizing scope The original definition involved people who had won grants, awards, etc and still did not really recognize themselves as award winners. This definition makes a lot of sense if the awards, honors, papers, projects, etc are increasingly fake
3 replies 0 retweets 24 likes
Every award process I have ever been involved in was fake. It's why I don't do them any more, and I stopped way before the post-2016 insanity. The occam's razor on imposter syndrome is "maybe most of these people really are bad at their jobs, but so is everyone else, and we
-
-
Replying to @Jonathan_Blow @simonsarris and
just muddle by for a while until we can't any more," but no popular treatment of the subject seems to be able to even conceive of this idea.
1 reply 0 retweets 7 likes - Show replies
New conversation -
Loading seems to be taking a while.
Twitter may be over capacity or experiencing a momentary hiccup. Try again or visit Twitter Status for more information.