BBP_Susan-86.jpg

Blog

Lessons from within

 
The Mistress of Medicine

This is a true story about a doctor who lost almost everything to his mistress.

Dr. Van Winkle, a pseudonym, loved his medical career with a passion.

Medicine was an all-consuming lover -- sometimes harsh, and always exciting.

Read More
Susan GainesComment
The Moral Choice to Be Late

My ex-husband, a physician, was always late. And his patients loved him for it.

This was documented year after year on his patient evaluations. He was consistently one of the favorite physicians in his group.

There was a prize for patients who waited that is rare in today’s medical world: They got fully engaged physician, who seemed to have all the time in the world for their questions and concerns.

Being late and struggling to stay on time is the bane of being a physician.

Read More
Susan GainesComment
Reframing ‘Me Time’

"So much of my day-to-day struggle is battling against The Clock,” Norman, a physician tells me. “And by that I mean being told what to do, when to do it, how long I have, and even how to do it. There’s so little time to just be.”

Once the kids are in bed, he gets to do what he wants. Finally.

He can scroll on his phone, waste time any way he wants.

It’s a sort of rebellion against having so little autonomy over the rest of his day.

Read More
Susan GainesComment
Smashing Limiting Beliefs

I have always hated swimming in cold water.

I am a strong swimmer, thanks to my mother, who never learned to swim, requiring that I take swimming lessons through Junior Life Savers.

But I was always freezing cold.

A little girl without body fat, my knees knocked, my teeth chattered as I sat hunched beneath my tiny no-nonsense towel on foggy Bay Area mornings to get into an unheated pool.

It became part of my identity: “I’m not a cold-water girl.”

I was a strong swimming who didn't really love the water.

But recently that story changed.

Wearing my red bathing suit, I waded into the Mediterranean Sea.

Read More
Susan GainesComment
Antidote for Burnout: Sanjana Karim, MD

“Ever since I began praying before I go into each patient’s room,” Sanjana Tasneem Karim, MD told me, “I have not suffered from burnout.”

Did Karim really have to magic pill for physician burnout which, according to several studies, is at an all-time high?

I circle back to talk with the Georgetown-trained psychiatrist to find out.

Read More
Susan Gaines Comments
Coaching Without Borders

She is Muslim. I am not affiliated with any religion, but carry the spirit of many. She is 21. I am 60. She is African. I am American. She is black. I am white.

Maimouna Diop and I met through LinkedIn. Or, more accurately, LinkedIn was the vehicle through which we connected.

Over thousands of miles, time zones, continents, oceans, cultures, a little voice told her that life coaching might be the answer for her troubles.

Her friends thought I might be trying to scam her. Why, they asked, would you want to tell this white lady across the world about your life?

For my part, I wondered, Why would this young woman — not a physician — from the west coast of Africa want to hire me as a life coach?

It turns out that everyone yearns, as some point in their lives, to transform, to be more, to lift up toward the light, to be their highest and best self.

Read More
Susan GainesComment
The Animal That Lives In Me

I did not know what a “spirit animal” was in 1979.

And if I did, I would have scoffed at the very idea.

Even though I grew up in Berkeley, Calif., arguably the birth place of woo-woo, I was also raised to be a skeptic.

But sometimes you don’t know what you need until it’s right in front of you.

It turns out I needed a spirit animal that day.

I was 17, alone in the Sierra Nevada wilderness, my weight hovering around 100 pounds.

I hadn’t eaten in two days. I had one more to go.

Read More
Susan GainesComment
How I Became an Accomplice

The first time my doctor-husband counted a large sum of cash into my hand, it was thrilling. Intoxicating.

In my family of origin, everything was measured out — money and love.

So when he handed me piles of cash, I felt loved. I felt cared for. I felt safe.

I also felt sick. I was becoming an accomplice — to what exactly, I wasn’t yet sure.

Workaholism is a sneaky foe, especially in medicine.

Read More
Susan Gaines Comments
When Work is Purpose-Driven: Basem Goueli

It was a weeknight.

I now know, Basem Goueli MD/PhD/MBA had already been working countless hours by the time a hesitantly reached out on LinkedIn.

“How much do you know about Hemochromatosis?" I messaged, referring to a genetic blood disorder that I’ve been managing for more than a decade.

“How can I help?” came the hematologist/oncologist’s immediate response.

Over the next few days I sent him charts of lab results and levels, as he requested.

Read More
Susan GainesComment