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Note: this is the transcription of the talk I've done at the Lesbians Who Tech Summit in San Francisco earlier this year. If you want to know more about my speaking experience see thisĀ article.
Hi everyone! For those who don't know me, I'm a senior software engineer at a big media company in Brazil (globo.com), Google Developer Expert in Google Cloud Platform, leader of several tech communities (Google Developer Group, Women Techmakers and Women Who Go), TEDx speaker, blogger, runner and a few other thingsā¦ by looking just at this resume you may think Iām a pretty confident person, but IāmĀ not.
One in thing in common among all those things I've done is that for every single one of them I felt incapable of doingĀ them.
Iāve discovered I had the Imposter Syndrome after reading last yearās infamous Google Manifesto (aka Manifestbro) from ex-Googler James Damore. I was so pissed off by his claims that women are biologically incapable of leading or performing technical roles that I needed to write a response.
While digging for evidence to counter-argument his claims Iāve actually found out that I was doing a lot of things that I didnāt know or didnāt feel capable of doing. I realized I was feeling the synthoms of Imposter Syndrome.
The response Iāve written to his claims you can findĀ here.
The tools Iāve been using to deal with the Imposter Syndrome since them are the following ones:
Tip #1: Take Small Steps to Build Confidence
If you go right for the biggest challenge you may not be prepared to deal with it and fail, which may give you the false impression that you arenāt capable of solving that problem, impairing your confidence.
On the other hand, if you start small and incrementaly increase the complexity no step will look too big to take. I give you an example of contributing to open sourceĀ code.
My first contribution to the Go programming language was changing for spacesā¦ yes, 4 whitespace characters:
An awesome contribution to the Go language!Ā :)
And it wasĀ merged!
I didnāt make any new contributions to Go language after that (shame on me), but that small step was enough to help me building confidence to contribute to other projects.
If your objective is public speaking, for instance, start with a small audience. One person is enough, then make it two, three, fourā¦ you get theĀ idea.
When facing larger problems remember that there is no problem that is unbreakable. Try to break big tasks into small steps. Even the atom (from Greek, atomon: indivisible) is divisible. Think about it.Ā :)
Tip #2: Embrace new opportunities
We women tend to reject new opportunities while we are not 100% prepared forĀ it.
Next time someone offer you a thing, like a talking spot, a new role, anything that you donāt feel completely prepared for it, please do yourself a favor and accept it. The reasoning behind this is that other people would offer you a thing if they didnāt feel you could takeĀ it.
And since we are talking about Impostor Syndrome here, they have a greater chance to be right than you. Accept it and move onĀ :)
Tip #3: Acquire knowledge on theĀ go
Iāve seen this picture at the IWD summit this weekend that I wish I had back in myĀ talk:
This comes pretty close with the last tip. Even if you are not capable of doing something, there is no better way to learn it than having a clear purpose ahead of you. A target, a deadline, an objective. Those are powerfulĀ things.
The thing is that if you are too comfortable somewhere you are not learning anything. And if you arenāt learning you are also not evolving. Be comfortable being uncomfortable. That should be your new baseline.
If you are using talking to an audience of 50 people, why not trying 100 people next time? Too big of a step? No problem, back to tip #1ā¦ maybe 60Ā instead?
Of course there are sometimes you need to fall back to your safe zone to recharge, but donāt let this rest be tooĀ long.
Tip #4: Learn how toĀ FAIL
Failure is an important part of life. We will expend most of our days on Earth failing at something. So you must learn to accept it so you can recover fast and tryĀ again.
I like to thing about or lives in the ways business people think about startups. The earlier you fail the better, so you wonāt expend so much time in something that didnāt worth the trouble. Also learn from your mistakes so you donāt need to repeat themĀ again.
It is important to note that once you start following tips number 2 and 3 you probably will fail more, because you are taking more risks, but you will also learn more and succeed more. In the end, still a win-win situation.
Tip #5: Be data-driven
Also inspired in the business world, gather data from your achievements, so the next time you are in a difficult situation you may have a look at how far did you get from where youĀ started.
Using data to track my weight loss and runningĀ skills.
Like I said before, itās not everyday that you will succeed. But looking at the long term trend will give you insughts whether you are going to the right direction orĀ not.
I used a graph to track my weight loss objective. Itās not every day that you will lose weight, but looking at the trend I knew I was on the right path. The same logic I applied to assessing my runningĀ skills.
Looking at the data will help you keep motivated and will also tell you when something is not working and you need to change yourĀ methods.
Tip #6: Be your trueĀ self
Nobody can achieve their best if you are expending too much energy hiding an important part of theirselves.
I did this for over 30 years of my life. Now that Iām being myself Iām achieving things that Iāve never imagined IĀ could.
Iām the same person, the only difference is that now I have all my energy focused on the things that are really important.
Me: before (2009) and after (2018). Iām always impressed by how younger me looks older than old me.Ā lolBonus: Have a personalĀ mission
Iāve put this as a bonus because I donāt know if everyone has the possibility of having a personal mission. I wish you could, but I may only speak for myself on thatĀ one.
When starting my transition I have had a hard time to find role models to follow and inspire me. There are only a few openly transgender people in tech out there, so I decided I would come out and be a role model for the generation toĀ come.
Gophercon Brazil Diversity Scholarship. One of the things Iāve done Iām most proudĀ of.
Also, itās not only about trans people. As a woman, I also feel the need to show the world that women are very powerful. That we are capable of doing anything that a man can do. After all, we are all humanĀ beings.
So, every time I feel bad or in doubt about doing something, I try to remember that mission. If the thing Iām supposed to do is aligned with the mission, then I must do it, not matter what! Thatās how I find energy to overcome the most impossible times.
Talk: Overcoming Impostor Syndrome at LWT 2018 was originally published in Hacker Noon on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.
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