It’s Okay to Feel Stupid Sometimes

It’s Okay to Feel Stupid Sometimes January 25, 2015

new-york-sept-05-026Have you ever been in a meeting, minding your own business, maybe thinking about what  you might want to have for dinner that night, when suddenly you realize all eyes have turned on you looking for an opinion?

Except that you have no idea what they were just talking about?

It’s not that you weren’t paying attention. No, you really were trying to follow the conversation. It’s just that, well, perhaps you are new to the project. And these people have been throwing around some god-forsaken set of acronyms and industry-slang shorthand because they are all so familiar with it.

But you don’t have a clue what they were talking about, so you drifted off for a moment.

In situations like this when it seems as if I am in over my head for a moment or two, at first I get all sweaty and red in the face as I think to myself how inept I am compared to these geeks. Surely they must think I’m an idiot and a big loser from the ivory towers of downtown Corporate. And how will I ever find the time to learn all of the technical details that they toss around so casually? I even become slightly envious of these subject-matter-experts, the way they have such deep experience in the matters we are discussing, these things that I have never really paid any attention to, nor cared much about at all, up until now.

There’s a name for this, when you come to realize that you don’t know something. It’s calledConscious Incompetence.” This condition is a step up from “Unconscious Incompetence,” where you are in a state of blissful ignorance because you don’t know what you don’t know. Therefore you don’t care.

But I have my own non-theoretical term for this conscious incompetence phenomenon, when it happens to me.

I call it, “Feeling Stupid.”

It can be intimidating when everyone in the room knows more than you do about something, or if you find yourself thrown into a situation where you are in over your head. But it’s not all bad. In fact, I would say that feeling stupid at work can actually be a good sign for your career.

Here are some reasons why it’s okay to feel stupid sometimes:

1. Feeling stupid means that you are outside of your comfort zone.

You are taking on new challenges which will allow you to grow and stretch. The Conscious Competence theory would say that you will eventually move through the discomfort of feeling inept into the next stage of learning. So don’t get too uptight.

2. It means you are not arrogant.

The days of the puffed up ego-bloated leader is so five minutes ago, in case you haven’t been reading the business news lately.  A little humility and insecurity can actually be a good thing. In fact, a Harvard Business article calls it the “Imposter Syndrome.”  Most up and coming managers will go through a phase of insecurity, where they are worried that they’ll be uncovered as a fraud. So, no, it’s not just you. Take a deep breath. Relax. You’ll figure it out.  And, guess what? Jesus tells us that the humble are the ones that will get promoted: “For everyone who exalts themselves will be humbled, and he who humbles himself will be exalted” (Luke 18:14).

3. It keeps you hungry to learn new information.

The quickest way to stop feeling stupid is to learn – ask dumb questions, read books, do research, start networking, get some mentoring, and then get some good old-fashioned experience. This is ultimately how you will grow, develop, and get ahead.

4. You’ll be better liked.

Let’s be honest, no one wants to work with an arrogant know-it-all blow-hard. Someone recently told me that the best manager he ever had was constantly asking for his opinion before making a decision: “Paul, what do you think about this situation? What would you do?” The boss’s respect for his expertise endeared this smart employee to his manager. Go team.

So, if you are feeling stupid, congratulations! And keep it up! You are probably on your way to a big promotion.


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