Lucky Person syndrome vs Imposter syndrome
- Judie Saado
- Mar 24, 2025
- 3 min read
Life has beaten me down. I am on the ground. It’s been hard, too hard. I’m too exhausted to stand, barely surviving, crawling on the floor.
There on the path of dirt, the stones, the filth, it’s hard to see rainbows and sunshine. You can, but only from a distance. They feel out of reach. Your face is covered in dust, your hands and knees scratched by stones. Every step forward feels impossible.
Then, life throws you a bone. You take it, grateful, desperate, but imposter syndrome creeps in. Of course, you feel out of place. You're beaten down, exhausted, just trying to survive, while others are in their thriving era, standing tall and strong.
You start forgetting your own worth. You assume others see you the same way you see yourself, tired, struggling, undeserving. With time, self-doubt becomes second nature. And when you doubt yourself, others follow.
You always look at what you don’t know, what you don’t have and you feel unworthy of any opportunity that comes your way.
You may go to an interview, and they will love you, they wll tell you you are skilled, with good mind process, you know how to do what needs to be done, and yu first thought will be… God I fooled them.
From your place on the ground, in survival mode, nothing amazing can happen, the wind near the earth is full of dirt and disappointment.
You are always waiting for the great opportunity that will get you up, while the great opportunity does not fly near to earth, you need to get up to seize it.
You focus on what you don’t know, what you don’t have. Every opportunity feels like a mistake, an accident, a fluke.
You go to an interview, and they love you. They say you’re skilled, insightful, exactly what they need. And your first thought? "God, I fooled them."
When you’re stuck in survival mode, Nothing great happens. The best opportunities don’t come crawling near the ground—you have to stand up to seize them.
Get up. The strength you’ve used to survive, don’t waste it crawling. Use it to rise.
Clean yourself up. Remember your strengths. Acknowledge your weaknesses, but don’t drown in them.
Think back to a time when you were appreciated. Embrace every kind word, every compliment, every achievement. Hold onto those. Believe in your knowledge, your skills, your presence.
Enjoy the sunshine from above. The air is fresh. The opportunities are clearer. You can see more opportunities, better ones, you can see your worth, Your worth is not measured by how well you crawl, but by how tall you stand.
Get rid of imposter syndrome.
You are not fooling anyone. This is your life. Your work. Your talent. And you have been settling for less than you deserve.
When you start believing in yourself, you work better. You achieve more. You make sharper decisions. You take action, not from fear, but from confidence.
Lucky Person Syndrome isn’t about luck, it’s about mindset. It’s about treating yourself with the respect you deserve. Humility doesn’t mean doubting your every move. Confidence doesn’t mean arrogance.
Never overthink your worth. you went this far because you are good, you are worth this and much much more, your potential is out there but if you can’t see it others can't.
Embrace it and nurture it.
Never overthink your worth, Unlock your lucky person syndrome not with energies and yoga but with your own mindset, with you believing that it is not an external thing you are attracting, it is an inside power you had all along, because it is your work, your potential and your worth.
So stand up. Take your place. And own it.



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