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Home > Guidance > Being a Dad and the Impostor Syndrome: What Changed for Me and How It Can Help You
Guidance

Being a Dad and the Impostor Syndrome: What Changed for Me and How It Can Help You

By Nicolas Rousse24 February 2025Updated:1 March 2025No Comments3 Mins Read
Être père et syndrome de l'imposteur ce qui a changé chez moi et comment cela peut vous aider
Être père et syndrome de l'imposteur ce qui a changé chez moi et comment cela peut vous aider

“Am I a good father?”

This question runs through my mind constantly. And I know I’m not alone. Doubt, impostor syndrome, self-questioning, and overthinking—they’re all part of the journey.

You don’t become a great father the day your child is born. You grow into it.

And while doubt and self-reflection are necessary for progress, self-sabotage is not.


The Invisible Weight of Doubt

Becoming a father means learning everything from scratch—diapers, bottles, sleep routines, discipline, tantrums, work-life balance… But nobody warns you about the doubt that seeps into every corner of your mind.

I wanted to be a great dad. Present. Engaged. Patient.

But reality hit me hard:

  • Every meltdown from my child made me question if I was handling things right.
  • Every conflicting parenting tip made me feel like I was never doing enough.
  • Every time I needed a break, I felt guilty.

And before I knew it, these tiny doubts had turned into constant self-judgment.

Doubt Is Not the Enemy—It’s a Signal

That day, I decided to reframe my doubts.

What if doubt wasn’t something to eliminate, but rather a signal to listen to?

  • A dad who doubts himself is a dad who cares.
  • A dad who questions his parenting is a dad who wants to improve.
  • And a dad who wants to improve is already on the right path.

So, I tested three simple ways to stop doubt from eating me alive:

Name the doubt. Instead of saying, “I’m failing as a dad,” I started asking specific questions: “Did I handle that tantrum the right way?”

Stick to the facts. Not my feelings. “Is my child actually lacking attention, or is it just my guilt talking?”

Take an honest inventory. “What did I do well today? What can I improve tomorrow?”

Self-Reflection vs. Self-Sabotage

The problem isn’t having doubt—it’s letting it become a downward spiral.

I had to learn that self-reflection is healthy, but self-blame is destructive.

  • Doubting yourself means you’re thinking about how to be there for your child.
  • Judging yourself means you’re adding pressure that helps no one.

So, I made a conscious choice: to be kinder to myself.

Because kids don’t need a perfect dad. They need a dad who keeps learning and adjusting.


What I’ve Learned

  • Doubt doesn’t mean failure—it means you care.
  • Clarifying your doubts leads to solutions, not just stress.
  • Perfectionism kills confidence—there is no perfect dad.
  • Your child doesn’t need you to be flawless. They just need you to show up.

Doubt never fully goes away. But learning to approach it positively, with a focus on solutions, has helped me let go of guilt and grow as a father.

So, what’s the doubt that’s been following you lately?

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Previous ArticleThere’s No Trophy for the Exhausted Dad
Next Article Non-Negotiable Rituals: The Ultimate Hack to Be a Present Dad (Without Blowing Up Your Schedule)
Nicolas Rousse
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Nicolas is the founder of Daddicted. At 40 years old, he's been running a digital media company since 2008 and is deeply involved in family life with four kids (two of his own, and two stepchildren). Nicolas consistently draws from science-backed best practices, regularly collaborating with psychologists, neuroscientists, teachers, and parenting experts. His dream? A society that celebrates parenting as a genuine success—equally valued for fathers as it is for mothers. To help make this vision a reality, he shares practical tools and real-life experiences aimed at building strong parent-child bonds and raising happy, independent, and responsible kids.

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