The imposter syndrome allows no room for redemption,
let alone ego or even humility,
in fact humility is the furthest thing from it. To even get them mixed up is a trick of the syndrome. Humility can only come from great power and ability, and to
confuse the two
means you already suffer from the syndrome because
of your weakness in conviction. It self-prescribes a state of utter weakness, lame and forgotten.
What redemption could come from being lost in such a hole?
I suppose that is what I am working on now. Reclaiming humility and allowing its only opposition to be my ego and arrogance. The imposter syndrome
has no place in the path of greatness and success;
and the tidings of the Almighty do not lie with the
lame and weak hearted.
Humility takes courage, and arrogance is simply a fault of the heart – one that can be fixed.
If and only if,
one is willing to dig themselves
out of that pit of darkness.
To escape the imposter syndrome however,
one must embrace the reality of who they really are
and who the world which cheers them on sees them as.
They must become
that which they feel a familial and supportive world imposes on them,
and forget that which they feel
the unjust system implies.