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Home»Mental Health»Feel like a fraud? Understanding Imp…
Mental Health

Feel like a fraud? Understanding Imp…

healthtostBy healthtostMay 10, 2026No Comments9 Mins Read
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Feel Like A Fraud? Understanding Imp...
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Impostor syndrome can feel like you’re standing outside a life that should be yours, feeling like the version others see is just a careful rendering. For some people, that feeling isn’t just doubt before a big moment. It’s a quiet, lingering question about whether the self they show the world is the whole truth.

Imposter syndrome
Inner critic
Authentic self
Treatment support

The door that was always yours

The writer Franz Kafka told a story about a man who waits his whole life in front of a door. At the end of his life, he is told that this door was always meant for him alone. It never came through. He just didn’t know it was his.

This is the quiet sadness of the as-if pattern. The real self has been there all along, waiting. While the person puts on an elaborate show about not needing it.

Basic insight

Feeling like an imposter may be less about failure and more about a self that has learned to hide in order to stay connected, accepted, or safe.

Because impostor syndrome misses the point

The term impostor syndrome is useful. But it is also a bit thin. It names the feeling without explaining where it comes from.

For many people, this overcomes the nerves before a speech. It is a steady, low sense of unreality. Like going through life as an actor who hasn’t learned the script enough. A quiet suspicion that the version of you that the world sees, competent, likable, put together, is a fabrication, and that underneath, there isn’t much at all.

Researchers often use the term impostor phenomenon rather than a formal diagnosis. This distinction matters: the experience may be painful and upsetting, but it doesn’t mean there’s something wrong with you.

In depth psychology this is called the “as-an” personality. This term describes a person who goes through the motions of life, rather than truly living it. They move like they belong. Like they feel. Like they know who they are.

The impostor syndrome and the mask we wear

We all wear masks. This is not a disease. It’s part of being human.

Persona is the name of the face we show to the world. You speak differently at work than at home. You act differently with your boss than you do with your best friend. This is normal. This is healthy.

However, for some the mask did not remain a mask. It became the whole face. The show became the face. Below, the real self, the true self, sat quietly in the darkness. Waiting.

When the inner critic is strong

If the voice inside keeps telling you that you’re not good enough, GoodTherapy’s article on self-compassion and the inner critic can offer another way to relate to that voice.

How does this pattern start?

This usually starts in childhood.

Children are smart. They quickly learn what is safe and what is not. If you grew up in a home where being too loud, too emotional, or too needy was treated coldly, you learned to adapt. You learned to become what the world needed.

A child who learns that being real feels dangerous will build another self. A more secure self. One who wins love by being pleasant, competent and easy to manage.

The true self does not disappear. He is hiding. And he waits.

The adult who grew up from this child often carries great ability on the outside. But there is a strange hollow inside. They have mastered performance. They just can’t remember who was there before the curtain went up.

If the roots of this pattern are linked to chronic stress, neglect, or trauma, it may help to read about how complex trauma can change a person’s sense of self. A trauma-informed approach emphasizes safety, trust, choice, and collaboration, principles also described by SAMHSA.

Do you recognize yourself here?

Here are some signs that you may be living in the “as if” pattern:

?The perpetual understudy. No matter how much you achieve, success still feels like a lucky mistake. You wait for someone to realize that they were wrong.
?Exhaustive adaptability. You are very good at reading a room and giving people what they want. Secretly, it completely drains you.
?Don’t know what you want. When someone asks what you want, not what you should want, not what would please others, your mind goes strangely blank.
?The feeling of the glass wall. You are present in conversations and relationships. But not quite there. You narrate your own life rather than live it.
?Needs praise but fears closeness. You crave recognition. But you believe that if someone looked very closely, they would discover you.
?A relentless inner critic. A voice in your head that never stops: not good enough. Not real enough. It’s not worth enough.

These experiences are not random. It is the logical outcome of a self that has learned to hide in order to survive.

A professional looks uncertain while working on a laptop, reflecting the self-doubt associated with impostor syndrome.

What happened to the hidden places

Here’s something most people don’t know. When we remove parts of ourselves, those parts don’t just disappear.

These hidden places become the shadow. The shadow holds what we have pushed out of our sight, our anger, our sadness, our strongest desires. All the parts of us that felt too dangerous to show. Often alongside anger and sadness is creativity, vitality and passion. The parts of the self that were repressed weren’t just the “bad” ones. It was the live parts. Those who felt too much, wanted too boldly, or loved too wildly for the world around them at the time.

The shadow does not disappear just because we ignore it. He finds other ways to get out. Sudden outbursts of emotion. Strange dreams. A vague feeling that something is wrong, but you can’t name it.

A gentle try-it-now exercise

Without forcing an answer, ask yourself: What part of me was waiting to be noticed?

Write a sentence that begins with: “Part of me wants to…” Then stop. You don’t need to explain, justify or correct the answer today.

How therapy helps impostor syndrome

The cure is to find the door that was always yours and finally walk through it.

The good news: the what-if pattern isn’t permanent. People find their way back to themselves. Not all at once. Late. Surprisingly. Often with great relief. Psychotherapy it can provide a structured relationship where thoughts, feelings, body signs and patterns can be explored with support.

1Learning to be seen. In therapy, you practice letting someone witness your true self, your doubt, your anger, your neediness. When that person doesn’t leave you or punish you for it, something inside relaxes. Being real starts to feel safe.
2Meeting your shadow. Not to act out the buried feelings but to know them. What emotions are you managing instead of feeling? What would you be like if you stopped playing?
3Returning to the body. The “as” pattern often means living so much in the constructed self that the body quiets down. Working with body awareness can reconnect you with sensations you stopped noticing a long time ago.
4Working with dreams. Dreams speak the language of the unconscious. They show you, with picture and story, exactly what your waking mind is too busy or too afraid to see directly.

Early research on interventions for the impostor phenomenon suggests that approaches such as reflection, self-compassion, and supportive therapeutic work may be useful, although more rigorous research is still needed.

Your sensitivity is strength

The very sensitivity that made the mask necessary is also one of your greatest strengths.

People who have learned to carefully read environments, who perceive what others need, who adapt with skill and care, these people have a rare and deep empathy. They understand others in ways that most people never will.

You don’t have to keep performing

The feeling of being an impostor, of going through life behind a carefully constructed face, has roots. And those roots can be gently, bravely explored. Therapy offers just that kind of space. To help you find your way back to what has always been right for you and let it take up space in the world.

A next step that does not require execution

You can start with an honest proposal in a secure relationship. If therapy seems like the right place for that, GoodTherapy can help you find a therapist that fits your needs.

Frequently Asked Questions

Immediate answers to impostor syndrome, self-doubt, healing and the inner critic.

Q: Is imposter syndrome a diagnosis? +

A: No. Impostor syndrome is a common way of naming feelings of deception and self-doubt, but it is not an official mental health diagnosis. The feeling can still be painful and worth exploring with support.

Q: Why do I feel like a fraud even when I’m competent? +

A: Sometimes the self that performs well is not the self that it feels it seems. If you learned to gain safety, praise, or closeness by conforming, success can feel disconnected from who you are inside.

Q: Can therapy help impostor syndrome? +

A: Therapy can help many people explore the roots of self-doubt, practice seeing them more honestly, and build a safer relationship with parts of themselves they’ve learned to hide. It’s not a quick fix, but it can be a solid place to start.

Q: What can I do when the inner critic is loud? +

A: Try to name the critic as a part of you, not your whole truth. A simple sentence like, “Part of me is afraid of being found out,” can create enough space for you to respond with curiosity instead of attack.

Take the next step

You don’t have to keep working your way through self-doubt alone. Support can help you understand what the mask protects and what your real self may need now.

Find a therapist near you >
Amanda Frudakis-Ruckel, LCSW, TCTSY-F

About the author

Amanda Frudakis-Ruckel

Licensed Clinical Social Worker, TCTSY-F

Amanda Frudakis-Ruckel, LCSW, TCTSY-F, is a licensed clinical social worker and psychotherapist practicing in New Jersey and New York. She was clinically trained at Memorial Sloan Kettering, Weill Cornell Medicine, and through the Mental Health Service Corps of New York City, and holds a Masters in Social Work from Fordham University.

Her practice, Person to Person Psychotherapy, specializes in trauma, identity, life transitions, grief and existential anxiety. She is grounded in existential, humanistic and narrative frameworks and is a certified Trauma Sensitive Yoga facilitator at the Trauma Center.

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The previous article was written exclusively by the author listed above. Any views and opinions expressed are not necessarily shared by GoodTherapy.org. Questions or concerns about the previous article can be directed to the author or posted as a comment below.

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