Imposter emerges from a long-standing internal conviction of failure—feeling unworthy despite sustained effort and visible achievement. For much of my life, this inadequacy was mistaken for external pressure. Only recently, through wider discourse on imposter syndrome, did I recognise it as an internalised psychological condition rather than an objective truth.
When encountering the archetypes of impostorism, I saw myself reflected in almost every one. While time and self-awareness have loosened some patterns, others remain entrenched—particularly the Perfectionist and Superperson imposters—driving compulsive flawlessness, overperformance, and constant self-surveillance.
Imposter marks a decisive shift in my practice: a full commitment to psychological inquiry, articulating internal mental states as ongoing lived conditions rather than narratives of resolution.