Stress in Research. Part V: If you really are an Impostor, then it's not a Syndrome
A natural way to end this serious of posts would be to talk about impostor syndrome. Instead, let me say something more personal about how I experience self-doubt.
One time, while I was going through a stressful transition in my professional life, I started reflecting about stress and self-doubt in research. I was hoping if I understood it better, maybe I could feel stress a little less.
Because I am who I am, my reflections ended up turning into a 5-part series of blog posts. They seem to have resonated with people.
If you read only one thing on this blog, read this.
A natural way to end this serious of posts would be to talk about impostor syndrome. Instead, let me say something more personal about how I experience self-doubt.
The fourth in a tidal wave of posts about stress in research.
The third post in what is becoming an increasingly long series on stress in research.
The second post in what is perhaps a series on stress in research.
Perhaps the first post in a series.