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Hailey's avatar

I'm from a lower middle class family and pursuing academia (sociology), and did my senior thesis about the "growing pains" (cute nickname for systemic exclusion) that comes with upward mobility-- it was centered around Bourdieu's theory of "habitus" which argues that social position influences tastes, attitudes, worldview, and cultural capital which reproduces social positions and class standing. The idea of being a "straddler" between two worlds (of class and taste) really shows the pyschological effects of trying to access a world that feels inaccessible on so many levels- but as you say "your discomfort isn't evidence that you don't belong; it's evidence that you're brave enough to belong somewhere new." I hope academia goes through a paradigm shift or something, because so many people from outside of this elite hegemony are breaking these barriers. If not, it will continue to be a self aggrandizing echo chamber of elite people researching non-elite behaviors for elite consumption/pathologizing. Maybe I am just speaking about sociology now...

Needed this! thank you :) you should check out Habitus if you are not aware of it already! Very cathartic (but also upsetting?)

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Stacey's avatar

It took me years at my corporate consulting job to realize that I didn’t really have imposter syndrome—I was nearly always confident about my work and abilities—but that my anxiety when presenting to clients was that /they/ would assume I was underqualified or too green, and cut me off or just turn to my manager. Even if someone overcomes their own sense of insecurity, others may assume it for them, which is exactly the fun-house feeling you’ve described!

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