Imposter Syndrome Doesn’t Mean You’re Inadequate
Why growth destabilizes identity and how to stay grounded while you expand.
“Maturity is when you don’t need to hear all the gossip or know a bunch of secrets.”
🩵A Quick Note from Me
Hi, I’m Jessica.
I write NP Fellow, a weekly mental health and functional medicine newsletter, to help readers gain emotional regulation skills, achieve optimal health and emotional freedom, and become the C.E.O. of their own health.
There was a point in my trading journey when I started doing well on paper, but felt worse internally.
The setups were clean.
The execution was solid.
The results were improving.
And yet, instead of feeling confident, I felt unsettled.
I remember staring at my screen after a winning trade and thinking,
“When is this going to stop working?”
Or worse,
“Who am I to be doing this?”
Nothing was objectively wrong, but internally, everything felt unstable.
At the time, I assumed this meant I wasn’t ready yet. That I needed more knowledge, more confirmation, and more time.
What I didn’t realize was that I wasn’t lacking skill.
I was experiencing an identity shift.
That’s the part of imposter syndrome we don’t talk about enough.
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Imposter Syndrome Doesn’t Mean You’re Inadequate
Imposter Syndrome Isn’t A Confidence Problem
Imposter syndrome is often framed as a lack of confidence or belief.
However, if that were true, it would disappear once people became competent, but it doesn’t.
In fact, imposter syndrome often shows up after growth begins.
When responsibility increases.
When visibility expands.
When your results outpace the version of yourself you’re used to being.
This is why people feel imposter syndrome when they:
move into leadership.
start trading or investing seriously.
publish their work publicly.
succeed faster than expected.
The discomfort isn’t evidence of inadequacy.
It’s evidence that your identity hasn’t caught up to your expansion yet.
Why Praise And Reassurance Don’t Fix It
One of the most confusing parts of imposter syndrome is that external validation doesn’t land.
Compliments feel uncomfortable.
Praise wears off quickly.
Reassurance doesn’t stabilize anything.
That’s because reassurance doesn’t update identity. It may temporarily soothe anxiety, but it doesn’t help your nervous system integrate who you are becoming.
In growth phases, relying on external validation can actually make imposter syndrome worse. Each new win increases the pressure to maintain an image you don’t fully feel anchored in yet.
This is where many people get stuck. They keep seeking proof instead of stability.
Confidence Isn’t The First Step
We’re often told to wait until we feel confident.
However, confidence isn’t a prerequisite for growth. It’s a byproduct of integration.
During expansion, what you need isn’t confidence.
You need grounding.
A way to stay present while your identity updates.
A way to move forward without demanding certainty first.
This is why so many capable people feel destabilized during periods of success.
They are expanding faster than their internal reference point can recalibrate.
The Space Between Who You Were and Who You’re Becoming
There is a space most people don’t know how to stand in.
Not who you used to be.
Not the fully formed version you’re becoming.
But the bridge between the two.
Imposter syndrome lives in that space and it intensifies when you try to rush through it or avoid it.
What actually helps is learning how to stay grounded while you grow.
How to orient internally instead of constantly checking externally.
How to let identity integrate gradually rather than forcing it to arrive fully formed.
This isn’t something that resolves overnight.
It’s a skill set.
Grounded doesn’t mean confident. It means oriented.
It means anchoring to evidence rather than emotion.
When your nervous system says, “This is too much.”, you gently return to facts.
What have I already done?
What skills have I already demonstrated?
What proof exists that I am capable of learning this next level?
You’re not arguing with fear. You’re stabilizing yourself with reality and separating discomfort from danger.
Growth often feels unfamiliar, and the body interprets unfamiliar as threat.
Grounding is the quiet reclassification: This feels new, not unsafe.
That distinction alone lowers urgency and prevents you from overcorrecting or retreating.
And it means acting from the bridge instead of the fantasy. Not from the old identity that feels smaller, and not from the perfected future self you think you should already be.
You act as the learner who belongs. The version of you in integration. Not finished and not fraudulent. Just expanding.
This is how identity catches up.🤝
Why This Takes Time
Growth doesn’t feel stable at first.
That doesn’t mean something is wrong.
It means your nervous system is adapting.
Skills like internal validation and identity integration don’t eliminate discomfort.
They change how the discomfort is held.
They allow you to remain steady while learning, visible, and imperfect.
This is why imposter syndrome doesn’t disappear all at once.
Imposter syndrome softens as your nervous system learns that growth is survivable and that you don’t need to earn your place every day.
Closing Reflection: A Different Way to Interpret the Feeling
If imposter syndrome is present, it doesn’t mean you’re behind.
It means you’re expanding.
It means your identity is updating.
And that process deserves patience, not pressure.
The goal isn’t to feel confident all the time.
The goal is to stay grounded enough to keep going.
If imposter syndrome has been showing up lately, consider this question:
“What part of me is still learning how to hold this next level?”
Growth isn’t about proving yourself.
It’s about integrating who you are becoming.
And that’s a skill you can build over time.
Thank you for reading this article.
Until next Sunday,
—Jessica
Your 2am friend who actually gets it
“You support your inner piece by letting the right information come to you instead of chasing after the craving of knowing everyone’s business. Ego wants you to be at the center of everything, but joy wants you to focus on your well-being.” — Yung Pueblo
🪩 A Gentle Invitation
If this article resonated with you, you may appreciate my new product called Weekly Skill, a paid NP Fellow series focused on one real, grounded internal skill each week regarding attention, impulse control, emotional regulation, presence, and learning how to work with your nervous system instead of against it.
No pressure. Just an invitation.🤝
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MEDICAL DISCLAIMER
This content is for informational and educational purposes only. It is not intended to provide medical advice or to take the place of such advice or treatment from a personal physician. All readers/viewers of this content are advised to consult their doctors or qualified health professionals regarding specific health questions. All viewers of this content, especially those taking prescription or over-the-counter medications, should consult their physicians before beginning any nutrition, supplement or lifestyle program.







If imposter syndrome has been present lately, it doesn’t mean you’re behind. It means your identity is updating.
This essay is meant to normalize that process and point toward skills that help growth integrate over time, not overnight.
This is detailed post. Imposter syndrome is crucial chapter of life