The waiting is the hardest part
Every day you see one more card
You take it on faith, you take it to the heart
The waiting is the hardest part
~Tom Petty “The Waiting”
Dear Reader,
This post is about courage part II. It is one of my favorite topics to think about. If you would like to read courage part I, please click here.
I was unable to post a blog in June or July - mainly because there were many things to juggle: finishing the Supernova business competition, my sons’ soccer schedules, homeschooling, after school activities, music recitals, my youngest turning 9 years old, family camping, etc. And on top of all of that - maintaining my new practice and working for telemedicine. And since I promise to never use AI for my blog, there never will be a hurried post that is written by a machine and supposedly looked over by a human at Lupine blog.
So it was very helpful that business slowed down because I needed the time for family and friends. Still, it brought a lot of feelings of self-doubts and worries that I am not getting a barrage of patients that I normally would in a traditional practice. But then in a large clinic, they have unlimited resources to market their people and do all kinds of publicity. Also they bill insurance so they have a whole pool of patients that various stakeholders have negotiated pricing for and are assigned to that practice.
In stepping out into the world on my own with my profession, I am granted the daily opportunity to fully take care of my patients in a way that makes sense and at the same time, practice the courage that it takes to continue to be when things are not going smoothly, such as a slow month or not fulfilling the high expectations that I often have, or succumb to my very strong urge to perform for other people, no matter how unreasonable they are.
But there are still times when I start to feel that it would be so much easier to do the traditional practice of being an employed physician, wherein it would be so easy to hide behind a dysfunctional system and never truly show myself and be vulnerable. Not that all physicians do that - it just becomes sort of the default.
I picture myself doing that when self-doubts appear about my private practice.
Then I think about all the things I would have to give up in order NOT to have that vulnerability:
And when this happens, I come to the conclusion that even though things are not going my way ALL THE TIME, I am absolutely certain that I cannot give these things up and continue to be content with my profession. Hence, I really have no choice - I have to make it work because the other way just really does not work for me.
Going through the local small business competition, I was able to get to know other small business owners and it has really helped to know that people go through the same things since it is absolutely terrifying to put yourself out there. And to get the reward takes time, patience and grit, and quite a bit of luck. And a supportive family and community.
And when I picture the worst thing that can happen - if I am unable to sustain the business and continue private practice, if I absolutely make a complete fool of myself over this venture, and if I am able to rewind time, would I still start the practice anyway? And the answer is a resounding YES!
And so I will need to teach myself to wait and do my work as best as I can and follow the usual adage that a lot of physicians live by when dealing with difficult things: hope for the best and prepare for the worst. And while I feel as prepared as I am going to get, I just need to learn to hope and to wait.
Most humans are terrible at hoping and waiting. If we look at what I think are truly the chronic illnesses in our modern society - overconsumption, isolation, discontentment - they are all the consequences of all the things that we are VERY good at: expecting rapid gratification, avoiding discomfort, remembering negative things and forgetting gratefulness.
On the other hand, hoping and waiting takes a lot of courage and it is VERY uncomfortable. Upon grappling with this on a regular basis, I have realized that there is a structure to courage in every situation - as if it has its own anatomy and each part has a function. Right now for me, necessity is its head - I need to do this because this is what works for me. Its heart is made of my family, friends and community. Its limbs are made of love of medicine and of my patients.
And so onward to the rest of the summer where I hope and wait to grow my practice and to find the right patients I can truly help and guide to optimal health.
Sincerely,
Dr. Hendrick
© 2023 Angela C. Hendrick
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