Every day I wake up thinking: today they'll find out. They'll realize I don't belong here. My undergraduate grades were good, sure, but that was a small school. This is a real PhD program with real academics. I'm just pretending. 
A 2026 article about grad student mental health said that "imposter syndrome is rampant in academia" and that "graduate students are particularly vulnerable due to the high-pressure, isolated nature of their work" . That's me exactly.
I look at my cohort and they seem so confident. They ask questions in seminars, they present at conferences, they talk to professors like equals. I sit in the back and hope no one notices me.
The article mentioned that "women and first-generation students experience imposter syndrome at higher rates" . I'm both. No wonder I'm struggling.
I also read about "the myth of the solitary genius" — this idea that real academics work alone and produce brilliant insights without help . But everyone needs help. Everyone struggles. Knowing that doesn't make me feel better.
My therapist (yes, I have one now) says to "collect evidence" — save emails from advisors saying nice things, keep notes from positive feedback, look at them when I feel like a fraud. I tried it. I looked at an email from my advisor saying "good work on this chapter" and my brain immediately said "she's just being nice because she has to."
How do you actually internalize that you belong? Not just intellectually know it, but actually feel it? I'm so tired of this voice in my head telling me I'm not good enough.
A 2026 article about grad student mental health said that "imposter syndrome is rampant in academia" and that "graduate students are particularly vulnerable due to the high-pressure, isolated nature of their work" . That's me exactly.
I look at my cohort and they seem so confident. They ask questions in seminars, they present at conferences, they talk to professors like equals. I sit in the back and hope no one notices me.
The article mentioned that "women and first-generation students experience imposter syndrome at higher rates" . I'm both. No wonder I'm struggling.
I also read about "the myth of the solitary genius" — this idea that real academics work alone and produce brilliant insights without help . But everyone needs help. Everyone struggles. Knowing that doesn't make me feel better.
My therapist (yes, I have one now) says to "collect evidence" — save emails from advisors saying nice things, keep notes from positive feedback, look at them when I feel like a fraud. I tried it. I looked at an email from my advisor saying "good work on this chapter" and my brain immediately said "she's just being nice because she has to."
How do you actually internalize that you belong? Not just intellectually know it, but actually feel it? I'm so tired of this voice in my head telling me I'm not good enough.