The Happya Life with Clare Deacon
What if thriving isn’t about having it all together but finally feeling at home in your own skin?
Welcome to The Happya Life with Clare Deacon, the podcast for women ready to move from survival mode to self-worth, nervous system healing, and emotional freedom.
If you feel stuck in people-pleasing, overwhelmed by self-doubt, or burned out from always doing more, you’re not alone. And you’re in the right place.
💬 We talk boundaries, burnout, emotional regulation, trauma recovery, nervous system work, and creating a life that actually feels good (not just looks good).
I’m Clare Deacon, trauma-informed therapist, positive psychology coach, and Amazon #1 bestselling author of Blooming Happya. I combine science, soul, and strategy to help women stop performing and start becoming.
In each episode, you’ll get:
- Practical tools and nervous system insights
- Real talk on trauma, boundaries, and rebuilding your self-worth
- Coaching grounded in neuroscience, embodiment, and positive psychology
This is where self-help meets self-connection.
🎧 Ready to heal the patterns holding you back and start living from your truth?
Press play. This is where your transformation begins.
The Happya Life with Clare Deacon
Imposter Syndrome After Trauma: What No One Tells You
🪷If something in this spoke to you, I’d love to hear, message me.
Why does imposter syndrome feel so much stronger for women who’ve lived through trauma, loss, chronic stress, or years of performing roles that weren’t truly theirs?
In this powerful episode of The Happya Life, trauma-informed therapist and positive psychology coach Clare Deacon reveals the truth most people never talk about: imposter syndrome isn’t a confidence problem, it’s a safety problem.
You’ll learn:
- How trauma rewires your nervous system and identity
- Why belonging wounds make success feel unsafe
- Why stepping into visibility triggers panic, fear, or self-doubt
- How childhood roles like “the helper,” “the strong one,” or “the peacekeeper” shape adult imposter patterns
- Why achievements don’t land in your body (and feel like accidents)
- The link between survival mode and feeling like you’re “acting” your way through life
- Three gentle steps to rebuild safety, self-trust, and internal permission to take up space
Clare shares deeply personal reflections, client stories, and trauma-informed science to help you understand why you feel like a fraud even when you’re capable, qualified, and rebuilding your life courageously.
💛 If you’ve ever whispered, “Who am I to be doing this?” this episode will help you see yourself more clearly: not as an imposter, but as a survivor who is rising.
Free Resources Mentioned:
🌿 The Self Reflection Map → https://happyacoach.com/self
💬 Book Your Complimentary Chat → https://happyacoach.com/chat
🌸 Let’s Stay Connected: Your Healing Journey Deserves Support
➤ Read Clare’s Book: Blooming Happya
Discover the story, tools, and transformation that started it all.
👉 happyacoach.com/bookstore
➤ 📲 Follow Clare on Instagram (Daily Truths + Real Talk):
@happyacoach
➤ 🎙️ Book a Free Clarity Call:
Need guidance, grounding, or space to speak? Let's talk.
👉 happyacoach.com/chat
➤ 📩 Join the Happya® Newsletter (Tools + Notes from Clare):
Weekly soul-checks, real-life insights, and practical tools.
👉 happyacoach.com/newsletter
➤ 🌐 Explore More at:
happyacoach.com
💌 Email Clare Directly: clare@happyacoach.com
🎵 Music by LemonMusicStudio
Welcome back to The Happya Life. I’m Clare Deacon, trauma-informed therapist, positive psychology coach, and founder of Happya and today we’re diving into something that so many women whisper to me privately, often with a mix of embarrassment and exhaustion:
“I should feel proud of how far I’ve come… but instead I feel like a fraud.”
If you’ve ever felt like you’re pretending, or waiting to be “found out,” or worried someone will tap you on the shoulder and say, “Sorry, you don’t belong here,” then this episode is for you. And I just want to say this upfront: you’re not broken. You’re not failing. You’re not the only one.
In fact, for women who have lived through trauma especially the subtle, relational, long-term kind imposter syndrome doesn’t just whisper. It shouts. It fills the room. It makes even your biggest wins feel like accidents. And I want to help you understand why.
Before we dive in, take a breath with me. If you’re walking, driving, or doing the dishes, just soften your shoulders a little. Because this conversation might hit close to home. And that’s okay. You’re safe here.
Let’s start with the truth most people don’t talk about: imposter syndrome doesn’t come from lack of ability. It comes from lack of safety. The kind of safety trauma steals. The kind of safety you’ve had to rebuild piece by piece.
Most people define imposter syndrome as the belief that your achievements are because of luck or timing, not your skill and that everyone else has overestimated you. That’s true… but it’s not the whole story.
For many women, imposter syndrome is actually a survival adaptation. For years, sometimes decades, your brain was wired to scan for danger, criticism, expectations, and emotional shifts. You became highly attuned to other people’s reactions, to staying in the “right” role, to not rocking the boat. That’s how you stayed safe.
So of course when you step into something new, a promotion, a new relationship, therapy, healing work, a creative project, setting boundaries, being seen, your nervous system panics. It goes, “Wait. This is unfamiliar. This is visibility. This is exposure.”
And exposure has never felt safe.
This isn’t a confidence problem. It’s an identity wound. A belonging wound. A safety wound.
If you’ve lived most of your life performing roles, the helper, the strong one, the fixer, the calm one, the peacekeeper, then stepping into a fuller, truer version of yourself feels like stepping out of costume. You feel naked. Seen. Vulnerable. And when you’ve lived in survival mode, vulnerability feels like danger.
I want to tell you a quick story here, a gentle personal one. Years ago, before Happya existed, before I trained in trauma, before I rebuilt my life and my identity from the inside out, I was doing everything I could to keep going. I was capable. I was functioning. I was doing all the right things. And from the outside, I looked fine.
But inside? I felt like I was acting my way through my own life. Like everyone else got the manual on how to be an adult, how to be confident, how to be “normal,” and I was improvising. And even as I started healing, even as I rebuilt myself after losing my husband, I would sometimes look at the progress I was making and think, “Who am I to be doing this? Who am I to be getting back up?”
But that wasn’t my truth speaking. That was the part of me that had learned very early that being strong meant hiding. That being capable meant performing. That being seen wasn’t always safe.
So trust me when I say: I get it. Imposter syndrome after trauma has layers.
And maybe this is true for you too. Maybe you’ve rebuilt parts of your life. Maybe you’ve worked so hard to survive that now, when your life asks you to thrive, part of you freezes. Maybe you look around at the life you’re creating and it feels… unfamiliar. And unfamiliar feels scary, not stable.
Let’s slow this down and unpack why trauma makes imposter syndrome louder.
When you grow up in environments where you had to adapt constantly to moods, expectations, criticism, silence, unpredictability, you learn to disconnect from yourself. You learn to read the room instead of your own needs. You learn roles instead of identity.
This is exactly what your YOU ecosystem speaks to that painful moment where you realise you’ve been everything to everyone… except you. That sense of losing touch with who you are, or what you want, or where you’re going. That disconnection is a core part of why imposter syndrome feels so overwhelming now .
Trauma teaches you to doubt your perception.
To question your worth.
To earn your belonging.
To shrink yourself so you can fit.
So when you step into your adult life where you’re meant to trust yourself, advocate for yourself, believe in yourself you feel wobbly. Like you’re walking in someone else’s shoes.
You’re not faking anything.
You’re just not used to being the main character in your own life.
From the Power Reset, we know this pattern well: the inner critic isn’t actually trying to bully you. It’s trying to protect you from being seen, judged, or rejected. It’s trying to keep you small enough to stay safe but the cost is that you end up doubting your potential, downplaying your achievements, and questioning your place in rooms you’ve earned your way into .
Let me share another story, one from a client, though the details are changed. Let’s call her Maya. She had rebuilt her life after a really painful chapter years of caring for others, ignoring herself, losing parts of her identity in survival mode. She got a new job. A good one. One she worked incredibly hard for.
But every morning before walking into the office, she’d sit in her car and think, “They’re going to realise I’m not good enough.” She’d overprepare. Overthink. Overwork. Not because she wasn’t capable, she absolutely was but because her nervous system was still living in the past. It was still living inside a story where she had to earn her right to exist in the room.
When I asked her what she feared most, she didn’t say failure.
She said, “Being seen.”
And that’s the core of trauma-driven imposter syndrome.
It’s not fear of failing. It’s fear of being fully visible.
Because visibility brings risk.
Visibility invites attention.
Visibility requires an identity.
And if you haven’t been allowed to form a clear identity, if you’ve been moulded by others’ needs, expectations, or reactions, then of course visibility feels terrifying.
Here’s the part that’s rarely talked about:
Trauma doesn’t just take away your safety.
It takes away your sense of self.
Who you are.
What you want.
What you need.
What you believe in.
What feels true for you.
And when you don’t have a stable sense of self, you feel like an imposter in your own life.
Let’s slow down for a moment.
Think about the last time you achieved something, at work, in therapy, in your healing, as a parent, in your business, in your relationships, anywhere. Something you should have been proud of.
What was the first thing your mind did?
Did it celebrate?
Or did it minimise?
Did it say, “I did that”?
Or “It’s not a big deal… anyone could have done it”?
This is what happens when you’ve spent too long performing roles instead of living as yourself.
Your achievements don’t land in your body.
They don’t register as truth.
They hit an internal wall, a wall built from years of disconnecting from your voice, your needs, and your value.
And that’s why imposter syndrome is so tied to identity.
Inside the Power Reset work, we talk about how when you’ve been everything to everyone else, you forget who you are underneath it all. You start living from scripts, not self. You start performing instead of belonging. You stay small because being small used to be safe. And when you try to grow, your nervous system sounds the alarm .
So how do we begin to shift this?
How do we soften the fear of being seen?
How do we build self-trust when trauma taught us to mistrust ourselves?
We don’t do it by pretending to be confident.
We don’t do it by pushing through the fear.
And we definitely don’t do it by shaming ourselves for struggling.
We do it by creating internal safety.
By reconnecting to ourselves.
By rebuilding identity from the inside out.
I want to give you three starting steps, gentle ones.
Not the whole deep-dive (that’s the work we do in Power Reset and in 1:1), but enough to help you take the next breath forward.
First: Name the pattern.
Imposter syndrome thrives in silence. The moment you name it “This is fear, not fact” it loosens its grip. And when you name it with compassion, not judgment, your system begins to relax. This is you saying, “I see you. We’re safe.”
Second: Come back into your body.
Imposter syndrome isn’t just a thought it’s a physiological reaction. Tight chest. Shallow breath. Pressure in your stomach. Frozen shoulders. It’s your body preparing for threat. Place a hand on your heart or your abdomen. Breathe gently. Remind your nervous system, “We’re safe. I’m allowed to be here.”
Third: Track your truth.
I call this a self-trust log. Every day, write down one thing you handled, one thing you learned, one moment you showed up. Your brain needs evidence and your life gives you evidence every single day. But you have to collect it.
These steps won’t “fix” imposter syndrome instantly, but they will help your body learn safety again. And when your body feels safer, your identity has room to grow.
Before we wrap, I want to speak directly to the part of you that still wonders if you belong. That still whispers, “Who am I to be doing this?”
You are not an imposter.
You are a survivor.
And survivors aren’t frauds they are resilient, courageous, resourceful, intuitive, powerful. Survivors build lives out of rubble. Survivors learn to trust themselves again. Survivors lead not because they’ve never fallen, but because they’ve learned how to rise.
If this episode is landing deeply if it feels like I’m describing something you’ve never quite had words for then I want to invite you into a conversation.
Not into a programme.
Not into a sales pitch.
Into a conversation.
Book a complimentary chat with me the link is in the show notes.
This is the space your YOU ecosystem was created for: a quiet, honest moment where you can talk about what’s going on inside you, what you’re struggling with, what you want, and where you feel lost. A space for real conversation, not scripts, not pressure, just clarity and support.
And if you want something gentler before talking to me directly, you can download the free Self Reflection Map it’s a beautiful starting point for reconnecting with who you are underneath the noise, the roles, the survival patterns. You’ll find the link in the show notes.
You don’t need to be fixed.
You don’t need to pretend.
You don’t need to earn your worth.
You just need to come home to yourself slowly, gently, bravely.
You’re not an imposter.
You’re a woman who’s rising.
And I’m right here with you.
I’ll see you next week.