STOP Lying to Yourself

STOP Lying to Yourself

According to Healthy Brains , our brains process 70,000 thoughts per day, whereas a study by researchers at Queen’s University , Kingston, Canada estimated it to be over 6000 per day. But whether it is 70,000 or 6000, each day we have a lot of thoughts going through our minds.


With many leaders, they don't pay close enough attention to their thoughts and see that some of those thoughts are unhelpful or irrational. And because many people are so used to those unhelpful thoughts, they don’t question or challenge them to see whether there is any substance to them. As a result, these unhelpful thoughts shape their beliefs, and they end up lying to themselves about themselves.


I see this time and time again when coaching or delivering workshops where someone has convinced themself that they are not good enough. It might be that they experience imposter syndrome and believe that they got their role because of luck, or that they can’t do something, or go after something that they want. It has a negative impact on their self-confidence, self-belief, ability to assert themselves, decision making, delegating, speaking up, and more, and it can be stressful.


Some of them think that the interview panel took pity on them or thought that they were the best out of a bad bunch. They forget that they’ve been through a competitive selection process and were deemed the best candidate for the role.


In many situations, the environment has a big part to play. Particularly where the person sees themselves as being different from the majority of their peers and in the minority amongst the leadership team.


It might be that they are a black or brown person in a predominately white team. They may be the only woman in a team dominated by men. They may have come from a disadvantaged socio-economic background whereas everyone else is from a privileged one. They may be the only introvert amongst a group of extraverts. Whatever their difference is, they don’t think that they are as good as the others, and the environment often does not help.


This is because the environment that they are in does not make them feel like they belong, and they don’t feel psychologically safe. Because of their privilege of being in the dominant group, the rest of the leadership team are often oblivious to what is going on.


Not having been through their colleague’s lived experience, they fail to see that the environment is one where some people feel like they don’t belong. Some think that because there is diversity, everything is ok. But just because there is diversity in the team, it does not mean that it is inclusive. Neither does it mean that everyone feels like they belong.


These leaders who lie to themselves let their self-limiting thoughts run rampant. They don’t stop and think about how irrational or how unhelpful they are, and they often don’t even realise that they are lying to themselves.


They have become so used to these thoughts that they don’t filter out the unhelpful or the irrational ones. But just because you think it, it doesn’t mean you have to believe it if it isn’t true.


When they stop to examine and challenge their thoughts, they see their thoughts for what they are and they stop lying to themselves. This is when things change for the better for them and they become less fearful, more confident, and start to believe in themselves.


If the above applies to you, what lies do you need to stop telling yourself?


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Do you compare yourself to other people who you think are better than you and put yourself down in the process or try to copy their style? If so, the best person to be as a leader is yourself and to find your own, authentic leadership style. And that is what I talk about in this episode of the podcast.


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About Me

I am an Executive, Career and Leadership Coach specialising in introverted women who are senior leaders. Through my work I have helped 1000s of women across the globe to increase their confidence, influence and impact as leaders, and overcome imposter syndrome, increase their executive presence, improve speaking performance in meetings, get a promotion, and much more.

If you are an introverted woman and a senior leader and want to increase your confidence, influence and impact, take my free assessment and get a report identifying areas to develop. You can take the assessment?here .?




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My book Quietly Visible: Leading with Influence and Impact as an Introverted Woman addresses many of the challenges that introverted women face as leaders and shows you how to overcome them. It was listed as one of the 10 best self-development books written by women to read during lockdown by BeYourOwn. Get your copy from my website, and you also get access to module one of my online course UNLEASH Your Leadership Potential for Introverted Women where you will learn how to understand yourself better and how to stop letting imposter syndrome, a lack of confidence, and other self-limiting beliefs hold you back. Get your copy?and access to the module?here ?



Priscilla Mugo

I help you turn your ideas into reality with digital project management | Connecting the dots from planning to execution and testing | Project Management for Entrepreneurs who want to work efficiently

1 年

I appreciate this, Carol. It helps me to get back on track faster by figuring out the root cause of the negative self-talk and intentionally process it to heal. Appreciate this reminder.

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Charlotte Hillenbrand

Speaker, coach, pilot - I help you fly in Your life ???????? Best-selling author, Winner Global Women of Influence 2024. Sustainable success and resilience through self-leadership is my passion.

1 年

This is a great article Carol, bringing many things into the light, for the individual feeling like an imposter and for the leaders thinking diverse is the same as inclusive. There are so many important facets to this. And so many of our problems (or perceived problems) would be solved if we only realised that we are enough.

Brenda Van Rossum

Leadership & Certified Career Transitions Coach

1 年

Very well written with profound tips for self-reflection. Thanks ???? for sharing, Carol

Famey Lockwood RN

Clinical Data Analyst (CHDA) ?? Interpreting the meaning of healthcare Data for the Delivery of Care, Medical Code updates, System enhancements, and healthy Lifestyles. ?? Veteran USAF ?? #TeArHealthcare

1 年

I have to say that some days my thoughts are in the 70,000 per day range. ?? While I have learned the mind does respond to what we feed it, I still get "?????? ?????? ??????????” at times. The difference is that I have grown to the point that I recognize the “track” and can get myself back on quickly. I ponder how we help our teams and colleagues to recognize the situation or …. “Call Carol

Marilyn Ama M.

Passionate about Learning & Development in the workplace | Youth Empowerment & Employment | CIPD Member |

1 年

"Some think that because there is diversity, everything is ok. But just because there is diversity in the team, it does not mean that it is inclusive. Neither does it mean that everyone feels like they belong."

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