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Fraud Syndrome - You ARE as Good as Other People Think You Are - Work-Life Balance Articles

Fraud Syndrome -
You ARE as Good as You Think You Are
By Sharon Teitelbaum, MA, MCC, Sharon@stcoach.com
Do you harbor the fear that one of these days the people you
work with will realize that youre not REALLY as good as they
think you are? That youre in a higher level job than youre
really capable of performing? There are many very bright, competent,
well-employed, HIGHLY EFFECTIVE people who suffer from some form
of fraud syndrome. The operant word here is "suffer."
From the people I have coached, I have learned that every persons
fraud syndrome is unique, so there is no single one-size-fits-all
antidote for it. But here are some thoughts that seem to apply broadly.
- It is the nature of high-level work that you dont always
feel completely on top of it. Whether its the sheer volume
of work you are managing, the sheer weight of the responsibility,
or the sheer complexity of the challenges you keep in your head,
if you are working to capacity, you will sometimes feel "in
over your head."
- Learn to be OK with that feeling. Its part of the landscape
you live in now.
- Trust the sequence of events that led you to this position,
the people who believed in you along the way, the hard work you
did at every step, the personal challenges you have come through.
It is no accident you are where you are.
- Take a look at what your fraud syndrome protects you from. What
is the payoff for stressing about this? For some people, its
a distraction from something else thats going on. I last
experienced it at full throttle when I was a systems analyst.
Stressing about my competence was actually more bearable than
the underlying truth I eventually had to confront: I didnt
want to do systems work any more and I had no idea what
else I would do. Feeling overwhelmed by all the new software I
had to learn was unpleasant, but facing my unknown future was
absolutely terrifying.
- You always, always, always have choice. If the stress of being
in this field at this level is not sustainable for you at this
time in your life, figure out what needs to change, and change
it. Take a job at another level, renegotiate your workload, change
fields. I dont mean to be cavalier about these kinds of
changes they are huge, life-changing transitions. But isnt
that perhaps just whats called for? And if you dont
want to leave the field, commit to learning how to do the work
in a more sustainable way.
- Be sure you have other things in your life to counterbalance
the stressors. Its a simple concept, I know, but you wouldnt
believe the number of people who WORK all the time, every day,
year in and year out, at the office and not at the office, constantly.
Or maybe you would believe it . . . ! If you are deeply depleted,
its pretty impossible to feel good about yourself or to
enjoy your life.
Need some help sorting it all out? CONTACT ME: Sharon Teitelbaum,
Sharon@STcoach.com, 617-926-8393
for an initial consultation at no charge.
[Back to Motivating Articles]
Copyright 2000-2008, by Sharon Teitelbaum, all rights
reserved.
For permission to reprint this article or to use it for anything
other than your own personal use, contact
me.
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