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Quiet the Critic: How to Silence Self-Doubt and Trust Yourself

Mar 19, 2026

Let me ask you something: how many times today has a voice inside your head told you that you’re not quite good enough, not quite ready, not quite smart or talented or worthy enough to do the thing you actually want to do? Be honest. This is English Plus. Never Stop Learning.

Self-doubt is one of the most universally human experiences there is. Virtually everyone has it — including the people you admire most and assume have it all together. The difference isn’t the absence of self-doubt. It’s what you do with it.

Here’s the first thing to understand: self-doubt is not a truth-telling machine. It feels like it is. It speaks with such authority, such familiarity, such intimate knowledge of your specific weaknesses and embarrassing memories. But it’s not giving you facts. It’s giving you fears. Dressed up as facts.

The psychologist Pauline Clance coined the term “impostor syndrome” in the 1970s after noticing that many of her high-achieving clients privately believed they were frauds — that they’d somehow tricked everyone into thinking they were competent, and that they’d eventually be found out. Her findings? This feeling was rampant among accomplished people. Which tells you something important: feeling like you’re not enough has very little to do with whether you are enough.

So how do you work with self-doubt rather than being paralyzed by it? A few things genuinely help.

Start by naming it. When the doubt speaks, don’t just absorb it — observe it. “There’s that voice again. It’s telling me I’m going to fail.” Creating a little distance between you and the thought weakens its grip. You are not your self-doubt. You are the one noticing it.

Next, look at your evidence. Self-doubt loves to cherry-pick. It finds every mistake, every stumble, every cringe-worthy memory and puts it on a highlight reel. Your job is to counter-program that reel. What have you overcome? What skills have you built? What challenges have you made it through that you weren’t sure you could handle? That evidence is just as real as the doubt — probably more so.

And then — do the thing anyway. Courage isn’t the absence of fear. It’s acting in spite of it. Most of the things self-doubt warns you about never actually happen. And even when they do — even when you stumble — you discover that you can handle it. Every time you act despite the doubt, you add one more piece of evidence that you’re stronger than you think.

You’ve already overcome things that would have stopped a less resilient version of you. That strength didn’t go anywhere. It’s still there.

So here’s what I want to know: what’s one thing your self-doubt has been keeping you from doing — and what would you do if you just decided to do it anyway, doubt and all? Tell us in the comments. You might inspire someone who needs exactly that push today.

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