Impostor Syndrome

Impostor Syndrome

Walking down the hall at FinCon, I nodded to a group of people sitting on a row of couches on my way to one of the conference rooms. As a a grouping of three simultaneously nodded back in unison, I was transported back to a moment decades earlier during my sophomore year of college. A moment of supreme impostor syndrome. It is still fresh in my mind even today. As the sounds and smells of the University of Michigan Student Union rush back into my consciousness, I marvel at how far I have come.

And how little progress I have made.

The Big U

The University of Michigan was everything that I was not. A brainy, awkward teenager, I was sprinting towards my twenties with none of the verve nor audacity of my peers. For one, I had no interest in football. Living in the athletically inclined South Quad Dorm, the hulking sports stars were worshiped on and off the public streets. My hallmates twittered excitedly when the award winning running back passed by. Or they moved out of the way gladly when one lineman or another crowded through the tiny passageways.

All the young men wanted to be them, and all the young women wanted to date them.

Speaking of young women, I found myself in a pretty typical Doc G situation. I had become best friends with the two most sought after women in the building. This was my MO. With none of the charm, swag, or looks to date such attractive women, I became adept at befriending just about everyone.

And the football players noticed.

Respect Given

One of them decided that I was romantically involved with both women. I have no idea why. The rumors spread quietly throughout the close group of hulking football and basketball players. Being the kings of the dorm, they weren’t used to having someone else push in on their perceived territory.

Which was laughable, of course. I did indeed have a puppy dog crush on one of the women, but she was much more interested in being worshiped than actually getting involved. The other was just a really good friend.

But to the outside world, us three were thick as thieves.

The Moment

It was really nothing. Just a singular moment in time. I was walking by myself through the student union, minding my own business. When I suddenly looked up and found myself staring across the hallway at a table of football players. Three to be exact. They were the best known and respected in the dorm. Students walked back and forth staring and pointing at them as they ate. They were celebrities in our little world.

As my eyes locked simultaneously with the three of them, something funny happened. All three bowed their head at the same time. A simple gesture. A shrug. A nod of respect denoting not only acknowledgement but acceptance.

And I nodded back. Confidently. A strange shared moment never to be recreated again.

I was an impostor. An impersonator in a world that I really didn’t belong in.

Fast Forward

That moment came back to me suddenly while passing groups of FinCon attendees seated or standing on the outskirts of the hallway as I negotiated my way to the next talk.

I could suddenly feel the hackles of my impostor syndrome coming back up to the surface. Even though I was no longer the awkward college student navigating the end of adolescent angst.

Even though I later found out one of the girls had a crush on me and was hoping that I would one day ask her out.

Even though I belong here. And coincidentally, I belonged there too.

My impostor syndrome just wouldn’t allow me to appreciate it.

Doc G

A doctor who discovered the FI community but still struggling with RE.

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4 Responses

  1. Katie Camel says:

    I had endless moments of imposter syndrome at FinCon, but I never suspected you did too. Thanks for sharing! I guess we all have those moments. Btw, there are probably more girls who liked you in college than you realized. Not all of them were crazy about football players. 😉

  2. Xrayvsn says:

    My imposter syndrome made me miss out on FinCon 18 in Orlando which I heard was a great time had by all and I regretted that decision. I made plans and did attend FinCon and yes, still felt like a bit of an imposter in a room full of online celebrities. The thing is even the big timers were approachable and down to Earth.

    It never goes away. Even in medicine you always wonder if you are doing everything correctly and the best treatment possible despite years of training preparing you for it.

  3. Gasem says:

    The football players were equally imposers. College breeds impostor-ism as people try on different life styles, like a suits of clothes. It isn’t till middle age imposer-ism gives way to acceptance of your role in society. Acceptance is when you understand your particular spot on the Gaussian distribution and seek to be nothing more or nothing less. That is the point in time where wisdom becomes incarnate.

  4. Thank you for sharing so candidly that Impostor Syndrome is real! I remember almost not taking my first job in strategy consulting because I didn’t feel prepared and just assumed everyone else was so far ahead. I ended up learning what I needed to know and , it turned out to be an amazing experience. When I find myself thinking something is over my head or I don’t belong, I remind myself of other things that worked out, and that helps. Doesn’t make it any easier in the moment, but it helps!

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