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Imposter Syndrome at the Senior Level: When You're 'Too High Up' to Admit You're Lost
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Imposter Syndrome at the Senior Level: When You're 'Too High Up' to Admit You're Lost

via Dev.toSkippy Magnificent

The Senior Leadership Paradox At junior levels, imposter syndrome is almost expected. Everyone understands that new employees feel unsure. But at the senior level — director, VP, C-suite — admitting uncertainty feels dangerous. You're supposed to have the answers. People are depending on you. Your confidence IS your product. So you perform. You speak with authority on topics you're still figuring out. You make decisions faster than you're comfortable with because hesitation reads as weakness. And at night, you lie awake wondering when someone will notice that you don't know what you're doing. Here's the structural truth: the higher you go, the less your job involves things you've done before. Leadership is definitionally about navigating uncertainty. If you always knew the answer, you wouldn't need to be in the room — a junior person could handle it. Your discomfort is the job description. Reframing Uncertainty as Competence The shift: stop trying to be the person who knows everything

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