Tag: Medicine
Flying too close to the sun

Here’s the story of Icharus in less than 10 seconds.
Icharus and his Dad are escaping an island using wings made from wax. Icharus is warned not to fly too close to the sun (so the wings don’t melt). Icharus disobeys. His wings melt. He falls into the ocean and drowns. The end.
Lesson: curiosity killed the cat, obey your parents, colour within the lines, don’t try to reach beyond your boundaries…
But as Seth points out in The Icharus Deception, that’s only half of the story.
Icharus was also told by his Dad not to fly too low, so that his wings wouldn’t be damaged by the salt spray from the ocean.
Lesson: making a prison break on waxen wings isn’t an exact science, playing it safe can be the most risky thing you can do, aiming too low is dangerous…
Most of us have been conditioned by Med School et al. to keep our heads down and avoid flying too close to the sun…so you’re easier to control.
Clearly, the one thing you must do, then, is fly as close to the sun as you possibly can.
What’s the worst that can happen if you do?
Or more importantly: what’s the worst that can happen if you don’t?
This is a taster from Escape Velocity: a personalised email course that guides medics step-by-step in how to successfully make the transition from being stuck in medical school…to living a life of happiness, freedom and fulfilment. Admission is by invitation-only. Click here to apply for your FREE invite.
Are you willing to head upstream?

A few months before getting kicked out of medical school in 2003, I attended a dull lecture that transformed my life and ended any aspirations for a career in medicine.
It was a sociology lecture. And right in the middle of lulling a lecture hall of about 200 medical students to sleep, my Sociology Prof suddenly grabbed me out of my seat with an analogy about a river.
“What it comes down to is a choice. You can choose to be the noble doctor who spends the next sixty years fishing the same drowning patients out of the same old river, day in, day out. Or, you can choose to be the one who leaves the river bank and heads upstream to stop whoever is pushing your patients into the river in the first place.”
Wow!
Here was the answer to the growing discontent I’d been feeling over the first few years of medical study. I’d signed up with the desire to change the world but was being trained in the ‘best practices of managing illness and disease’. But now, with my Sociology Professor’s brilliant analogy, I knew what my next move had to be: I was going to head upstream, whatever that looked like.
So when I was thrown out of medical school a few months later, with no qualifications, the weight of having let my family and friends down, and a tonne of student debt, I got a job at a local doctor’s practice.
Officially I was there to read through 7,350 patient records and summarise them onto a computer so that the Practice could claim money from the Government. And for a while I simply did my job, innovating every chance I got, including finding a loophole in the Government contract within my first few weeks that let the Practice claim a few thousand pounds of money overnight.
And as long as I was pushing the boundaries within doing my job, things went well.
But the moments I attempted to head “upstream”, the responses ranged from apathy, to slight concern to angry emails from doctors and a phone-call from a ruffled local member of government.
I found the same in the worlds of freelancing, church, hustling products for a Hollywood makeup artist, talking to people down at the unemployment office during the years of taking care of a wife and three kids on benefits…
Do your job/stay in line = fine.
Try to change the world/Head upstream = frustration of trying to empty an ocean with a tea cup.
In other words, they — critics, neighbours, family, friends, nemeses — were right.
You can’t change the world, because the world doesn’t want to be changed.
Which is when I had an epiphany.
Even though most of my efforts to ‘change the world’ had been shot down in flames,there was one thing that actually consistently was a resounding success.
The Conversations and Salvador Dali
Every time I’d found myself having a Conversation with someone about what they really cared about, what they were working on, what they felt their God-given reason for being alive was…I’d been able to encourage them, goad them, and in a small way push them to keep doing what they already knew they needed to do…despite what they said.
The Conversations. Intimate one on one interactions. Encouraging those who were already “heading upstream” to build something important…without a marked out path or readily available resources for doing it.
The Conversations. Exchanging ideas and perspectives. Celebrating the tiny milestones that they simply branded as “pointless wastes of time”.
The Conversations. Earning the right to be invited into Conversations with those who were already fumbling to figure out how to make bricks without straw for the dreams they were building into reality.
That’s what I was supposed to do. That’s where I could do my Work of encouraging those who were building the future.
So I entered the world of marketing as a way of being invited into the Conversations going on in the world of business and entrepreneurship.
So I became a Bass player to help find the groove of the Conversations going on in various jam sessions.
So I became a husband and father to be able to have an influence on the Conversations of my kids and grandkids (inspiring others to do the same).
So I launched a project called Paperback Junkie (#FAIL) as a way of having Conversations around the books that had shaped my thinking and given me the raw material for building my dreams.
So I started a blog called Save Dali (#FAIL) that has no comments, no Salvador Dali, and a simple desire to spark a Conversation with someone who’s already doing the Work of making bricks without straw.
And so I decided to start a medical school called Bizarro to help find the others who are also trying to figure out how to head upstream.
You’re still reading, so I guess that means I’ve found you.
Email me. Let’s talk. And above all, keep doing what you’re doing…we need you to.
This is a taster from Escape Velocity: a personalised email course that guides medics step-by-step in how to successfully make the transition from being stuck in medical school…to living a life of happiness, freedom and fulfilment. Admission is by invitation-only. Click here to apply for your FREE invite.
It’s your last night on earth…again

It’s your last night on earth…again.
What’re you going to do with it?
This is a taster from Escape Velocity: a personalised email course that guides medics step-by-step in how to successfully make the transition from being stuck in medical school…to living a life of happiness, freedom and fulfilment. Admission is by invitation-only. Click here to apply for your FREE invite.
How does this story end?

I’d had enough.
It was 2003, and I was a medical student who’d spent the last three years being harassed, bullied and left being thoroughly disillusioned with the career I’d once been so enamoured with.
So one evening after lectures, I climbed the creaky stairs to the attic that I was renting, gently closed the door, walked under the skylight window to the desk in the corner, sat down, took out a sheet of foolscap and a blue Bic biro…and started to write.
I wrote for what seemed like over an hour.
And when I pressed the final full stop in the page, and read through what I’d written, I wasn’t happy.
You see, what I’d written was a detailed, thought through description of what my life would look like over the next 40 years if I continued on the path that I was currently on.
I wrote out what would happen after third year, fourth year, fifth year, graduation, internship, hours I’d be working, time and energy costs, social circles I’d be moving in, the type of person I’d be likely to marry given my circumstances, family expectations of continuing my family’s medical legacy…all the way up to retirement from the career path I was plodding along.
And what I read didn’t excite me, fill me with joy, or inspire me with hope for the future.
Instead it underscored for me a truth that I knew before I started writing:
Something has got to change.
I need to figure out how to escape from the gravity of this world that I’m currently stuck on.
I can’t keep going like this.
Within 6 months of writing those pages, I was suddenly kicked out of Medical School and launched on a 14-year Journey that led to me starting Bizarro School of Medicine, and helping Medics from around the world to find and achieve their personal Escape Velocity.
And it all started from deciding to figure out what would happen if I stayed on the path I was on without changing anything…and also deciding whether what I saw was acceptable to me or not.
It wasn’t. And the moment I declared that to myself, things changed.
If the story you’re living out doesn’t have an ending that you are willing to accept, the good news is that you can change it.
You don’t need to know how. Instead, you just need to decide that your story needs a better ending…and then the details of how will make themselves known.
This is a taster from Escape Velocity: a personalised email course that guides medics step-by-step in how to successfully make the transition from being stuck in medical school…to living a life of happiness, freedom and fulfilment. Admission is by invitation-only. Click here to apply for your FREE invite.
3 pages that could save your life

When you get up in the morning, grab your notebook, and fill it with 3 pages of writing.
These are your Morning Pages, a simple idea that was shared by Julia Cameron.
And the habit of doing Morning Pages will save your life…if you’ll let them.
That’s because Morning Pages are an opportunity for you to clear away all the emotional and mental rubble that’s cluttering your soul, and find your way to the clear springs of water that lie underneath it all.
Morning Pages are a chance for you to dare to express how you really feel and what you really think, when nobody around gives you the space or the grace to do so.
Morning Pages are for your eyes only. They’re not to be shared, critiqued or corrected.
You can write them out by hand in a physical book that you can keep or burn when you’ve filled it.
You can even write them in a password protected folder in Google Docs, Evernote or any other writing app on your phone…if you’re feeling afraid of what will happen if anyone you know comes across them.
You can write them, where all you’re doing is writing 3 pages of “I don’t know what to write, I don’t know what to write, I don’t know…”
How you do it isn’t the point. That you do it…is everything.
Because the simple act of finding the courage to express how you really feel will spill over positively into every area of your life.
Also, the act of writing Morning Pages will help you gain clarity on what you really think and how you really feel.
Sometimes the best way to figure out both of these things is to sit down and just start writing.
Morning Pages are your new secret weapon in your Journey to living a life of joy and fulfilment.
UPDATE: a brilliant free resource that I’ve been testing since last month for doing morning pages is 750words.com Highly recommended.
This is a taster from Escape Velocity: a personalised email course that guides medics step-by-step in how to successfully make the transition from being stuck in medical school…to living a life of happiness, freedom and fulfilment. Admission is by invitation-only. Click here to apply for your FREE invite.
Cutting off your right arm (to save your life)

That’s the premise of the movie 127 hours: the true story of how Aron Ralston had to cut off his own arm with a dull pocket knife after being trapped under a boulder in Blue John Canyon for 5 days and seven hours.
He then had to navigate his way out of the canyon, and then rappel down a 65-foot sheer cliff face to get to safety.
He made it…but only by being willing to cut his arm off.
You’re also going to make it. And maybe it won’t come down to actually cutting off your arm with a blunt pocketknife.
But maybe you’ll have to give up something that might feel just as painful and unimaginable as losing a limb.
Approval of your parents…socialising with your friends…binge-watching Game of Thrones…3 hours a day on Facebook…taking hot showers…your old identity…
And when the moment comes, where you have to decide between cutting off an attachment that’s keeping you from getting to your destiny: what will you do?
You’ve already made tremendous sacrifices in order to do something that’s killing you. Are you willing to do at least as much in order to pursue something that makes you feel alive?
Is there even one small thing that you’re willing to give up right now in order to pursue what you really want?
And even if you don’t end up having to cut off your arm to escape to freedom…are you at least willing?
This is a taster from Escape Velocity: a personalised email course that guides medics step-by-step in how to successfully make the transition from being stuck in medical school…to living a life of happiness, freedom and fulfilment. Admission is by invitation-only. Click here to apply for your FREE invite.