i love how you explain this. especially because you appear to be the only one, or one of the only to consider the context which made all the difference for me. cuz i don’t think we acquire negative self talk or cognitive distortions out of thin air but through our environment or others. i love it! you need to have some audible books, you have an enjoyable voice to listen to.
Hey Dr. Lorri! First off, love your videos! I'm an agender AMAB person who stumbled upon your videos and appreciate the work your doing in that realm. I've suffered from "imposter syndrome" for many years., from my job to how I've raised my kids, to so many other things over the decades that I've forgotten the vast majority of them. It seems like it's ever-present in my life, to the point where I don't even recognize it anymore. Anyway, the reason for my comment is that it struck me (surprisingly) at how gendered (binary) the discussion was in this video. it's not a critique, as I thoroughly enjoyed it and got a lot out of it, it was just something I noticed. I know you led with 'anyone can get imposter syndrome but...', but everything after that seemed to draw a stark line between the gender binary. I get it though, it's (unfortunately) the world we live in... there's a lot of distinct buckets that society has spent years filling with binary gender stereotypes (and outright reality), and they're not going to disappear overnight, as much as I wish they would. Anyway, it's just what popped into my head when I was watching and thought I'd say hello and share. Thanks for your work and all the content you've provided! 💜
Very grateful for this shift of perspective.
i love how you explain this. especially because you appear to be the only one, or one of the only to consider the context which made all the difference for me. cuz i don’t think we acquire negative self talk or cognitive distortions out of thin air but through our environment or others. i love it! you need to have some audible books, you have an enjoyable voice to listen to.
Hey Dr. Lorri!
First off, love your videos! I'm an agender AMAB person who stumbled upon your videos and appreciate the work your doing in that realm. I've suffered from "imposter syndrome" for many years., from my job to how I've raised my kids, to so many other things over the decades that I've forgotten the vast majority of them. It seems like it's ever-present in my life, to the point where I don't even recognize it anymore.
Anyway, the reason for my comment is that it struck me (surprisingly) at how gendered (binary) the discussion was in this video. it's not a critique, as I thoroughly enjoyed it and got a lot out of it, it was just something I noticed. I know you led with 'anyone can get imposter syndrome but...', but everything after that seemed to draw a stark line between the gender binary.
I get it though, it's (unfortunately) the world we live in... there's a lot of distinct buckets that society has spent years filling with binary gender stereotypes (and outright reality), and they're not going to disappear overnight, as much as I wish they would.
Anyway, it's just what popped into my head when I was watching and thought I'd say hello and share. Thanks for your work and all the content you've provided! 💜
❤
🙌 'Promosm'