David Lammy’s suffering and an important lesson we all must learn | Politics | News

Foreign Secretary David Lammy says heโs suffered from it at โevery stageโ of his life. Michelle Obama reveals that in her multimillion best-selling autobiography Becoming that she was paralysingly afflicted by it. Many hugely successful individuals who seem to exude confidence and authority insist it stops them in their tracks.
What am I talking about? Impostor syndrome. You might be crippled by IS yourself. If you are, youโll be all too familiar with the symptoms. One minute youโre striding forth oozing vim, vigour and enthusiasm, the next youโre gripped by anxiety and ask yourself with mounting panic: โHow can I convincingly pass myself off as capable when, deep down, I know Iโm an unqualified fraud?โ
Somehow youโve managed to fool all the people all of the time, but your cover is about to be blown. Youโve constructed a career and identity out of smoke and mirrors.
Youโre a sham, an ignorant interloper and your inadequacy will be exposed. Then, when you are revealed as a fraud, your disgrace will be so humiliating your reputation will never recover.
Youโll be sent packing from your firm, family and even your country with your name reviled in perpetuity. Even descendants will pretend they had nothing to do with you.
There are exceptions. Journalist, news- reader and presenter Clive Myrie asserts that heโs never experienced it, offering an insight: โIf youโre not from the right milieu you start to doubt yourself. But I didnโt doubt myself. Impostor syndrome I donโt have.โ
But many of us do feel that weโre winging it and are frighteningly aware of our inadequacies. Perhaps our parents and teachers told us that weโd never amount to much, yet somehow no one else seems to have realised.
Weโve quoted Alice Through The Looking Glass so many times that we almost believe weโve read it ourselves โ and we know that a house of cards always comes tumbling down.
No wonder we donโt feel grown up enough to believe we deserve to be adults or sufficiently knowledgeable to take important decisions without spending tortured nights pummelling the pillow.
What a rotten waste of our time is imposter syndrome. It impedes our progress and robs us of enjoyment and satisfaction. Shouldnโt schools start treating children for IS before it messes up their lives?