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Elle Halliwell: “Imposter Syndrome is well and truly alive in me”

Sydney journalist and author Elle Halliwell opens up a to editor Keshnee Kemp about how she overcame her own inner critic, in a revealing chat for WHO’s new Raw Talks podcast series.

She’s achieved a lot in her 33 years – written a book, carved out a career as one of the country’s best known fashion journalists, interviewed scores of high-profile actors and celebrities on TV and radio – but Sydney journalist Elle Halliwell is the first to admit, her success hasn’t always sat comfortably.

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“Imposter syndrome is well and truly alive in me,” she told WHO editor, Keshnee Kemp, in a candid chat for the Raw Talks podcast.

“It’s one of those questions where you still question if you’re doing enough; whether you really are as capable as other people perceive you.”

Halliwell, who two years ago fought a very public battle with cancer (she was diagnosed just two days before she found out she was pregnant), said that the years leading up to that seismic life-altering diagnosis were sometimes difficult, as she wrestled with a feeling she didn’t quite belong in the ritzy world of fashion and entertainment.

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She believes Imposter Syndrome is a very real concern for young, successful women.

“What I would say to anyone who is still quite young – sometimes all of us, we fumble around sometimes; we don’t always get it right. And I think that while confidence does comes with age, there is still that niggling thing in the back of your mind like, ‘Am I good enough?’”

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She says as she got older, and more comfortable in her own skin, she learnt to quieten the voice in her head.

“You get a little more confident in telling that little voice to f-off,” she says.

Listen to the entire Raw Talks conversation between Elle Halliwell and Keshnee Kemp below.

https://omny.fm/shows/raw-talks/raw-talks-ep-2
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