
Medicine gives you a map. Pre-med, med school, residency, attending. Step by step, no shortcuts. Then one day, the map disappears and you’re there asking, “Now what?”In this episode, Dr. Mizuho Morrison and I dig into what happens after training, when fulfillment, identity, and control are no longer prescribed. We talk about nonlinear careers in medicine, from part-time clinical work and motherhood to podcasting, entrepreneurship, leadership, and walking away from roles that no longer fit.We also get into what happened when Mizuho wore a continuous glucose monitor during emergency department shifts, and what it revealed about stress, cortisol, and the real physiologic cost of the job.This is a conversation about agency, experimentation, and ownership, and how to build a medical career that actually works for your life, not just your training.💡 Check out our Free Resources specifically designed to address pain points in medical practice💡Guest Bio: Dr. Mizuho Morrison is a board-certified emergency physician in Southern California and CEO of EM:RAP. A graduate of the Los Angeles County + USC residency program, she has worked in both academic and community emergency medicine and has been a major voice in EM education for more than a decade. Miz was one of the first female EM podcasters, helped launch multiple EM:RAP programs, served as Editor-in-Chief and Senior Medical Director at Hippo Education, and co-hosted Essentials of Emergency Medicine. She is also an entrepreneur and cofounder of 3MD, Three Mommy Doctors, a medical device company that reimagined first-aid kits for kids. She lives in Orange County with her two children.We Discuss:The Train Track Problem in Medical CareersFulfillment Is Not One Standard Career ShapeSeasons, Experiments, and Knowing When to Move OnStress, Cortisol, and the Cost of Shift WorkBegin Before You Feel ReadyReclaiming Agency in a System That Keeps Asking for MoreMentioned in this episode:Supranormal: A Field Guide for the Impossible JobRob's book is for anyone doing high-stakes, human-facing work who's ever thought I wasn't trained for this. Built from 20 years in emergency medicine and thousands of hours coaching physicians, Supranormal delivers the tools, mindset shifts, and communication techniques that don't show up on any board exam, but make all the difference in how you perform, connect, and build a career worth keeping.Get Supranormal on AmazonDoctoring Done Well | Bite-Sized WinsEvery other week, a few minutes of career-elevating insight delivered straight to your inbox.
The Doctoring Done Well Newsletter is never lame, never spammy, and always fresh.Sign up for our NewsletterUnBurnable Registration is Now OpenWe took the highest yield tools from our 1:1 coaching and created a community-based course with docs who get it and get you.The UnBurnable Course
Apr 27
1 hr

It’s not uncommon for hospitals to provide clinicians with scorecards. While they may seem like a judgment of your quality of work, scorecards rarely provide data that will lead to flourishing in your career. But what if you made your own scorecard, filled with things that were important to you and fully within your control? If you nailed one of those each day at work, what would your experience be like?In this episode, we explore what happened when Dr. Erin Broderick, a participant in the Unburnable Course, stopped using the hospital’s scorecard as her main definition of success and created a more personal one instead. Erin talks about how she took a new approach to patient satisfaction surveys, one that has eliminated nearly all the stress and distress associated with them.Finally, we look at how intentional practices during and after a shift made Erin’s work feel joyful and sustainable.💡 Check out our Free Resources specifically designed to address pain points in medical practice💡We Discuss:Measuring success with a personal scorecardA post-shift routine that closes the dayClosing open loopsA novel approach to patient satisfaction surveysLetting go of metrics that don’t serve youScheduling recovery during the shiftExtending intentionality beyond the hospitalMentioned in this episode:Doctoring Done Well | Bite-Sized WinsEvery other week, a few minutes of career-elevating insight delivered straight to your inbox.
The Doctoring Done Well Newsletter is never lame, never spammy, and always fresh.Sign up for our NewsletterSupranormal: A Field Guide for the Impossible JobRob's book is for anyone doing high-stakes, human-facing work who's ever thought I wasn't trained for this. Built from 20 years in emergency medicine and thousands of hours coaching physicians, Supranormal delivers the tools, mindset shifts, and communication techniques that don't show up on any board exam, but make all the difference in how you perform, connect, and build a career worth keeping.Get Supranormal on AmazonUnBurnable | Our Cohort-Based Burnout Prevention and Cure CourseWe took the highest yield tools from our 1:1 coaching and created a community-based course with docs who get it and get you.The UnBurnable Course
Apr 13
26 min

If you have ever lost it mid-shift, frozen when you should have acted, or spent the next two weeks asking yourself what's wrong with me, you already know what character assassination feels like.In this episode, we break down a simple and effective reframe that interrupts the self-flagellation shame spiral without making excuses or lowering standards. You will learn how to move from why did I to, of course, how to give yourself a legitimate and hard-earned break, and why self-compassion is not softness but one of the most underutilized performance tools in medicine. Topics include physician burnout, self-compassion, cognitive reappraisal, shame and self-criticism, communication under stress, and physician coaching.💡 Check out our Free Resources specifically designed to address pain points in medical practice💡We discuss:Why self-criticism after a hard moment often hurts more than the moment itselfThe difference between first-order distress and second-order distressWhat the research on rumination and shame actually showsWhy your brain treats harsh self-evaluation like a physical threatThe biology of performance under load and why grit has a limitThe of 'course' reframe and how to use it in real timeFour steps to move from character assassination to context assessmentWhy suppression makes it worse, and reappraisal changes the signalPre-shift dread and how to take the shame out of itWhy self-compassion is a performance tool, not a soft skillWhat this reframe is not: excuses, lowered standards, or avoiding accountabilityHow to start today with one sentenceMentioned in this episode:Doctoring Done Well | Bite-Sized WinsEvery other week, a few minutes of career-elevating insight delivered straight to your inbox.
The Doctoring Done Well Newsletter is never lame, never spammy, and always fresh.Sign up for our NewsletterThe Out-On-Time CourseBuilt for emergency clinicians who are tired of chart debt and getting derailed by interruptions and overwhelm. Learn practical, real-time documentation and shift-efficiency strategies to finish your shift and actually leave on time.Learn More About The Out-On-Time Course
Feb 23
20 min

Emergency medicine has an interruption-based workflow. There's no getting around some of that, but recurrent interruptions erode quality of care, accuracy of documentation, concentration, and ultimately the ability to leave work on time. While some interruptions are unavoidable, most are predictable and preventable. Reclaiming control over interruptions is more than a way to improve efficiency; it's about patient safety, reducing medical errors, and safeguarding your mental health. Constant task switching creates cognitive load, contributing to emergency physician burnout and compromising clinical decision-making.In this episode, we explore tactical and mindset shifts that emergency clinicians can use to reduce interruptions, enhance documentation efficiency, and avoid the hidden costs of task switching. We'll cover practical strategies for managing EKG interruptions, skillful ways to manage nursing questions, and setting boundaries all while maintaining team dynamics and patient care quality. Whether you're an emergency physician, PA, NP, or resident, these evidence-based strategies will help you work smarter, reduce stress, and reclaim control of your clinical day.Finishing emergency department shifts with a stack of charts to complete gets old fast. This chart debt also contributes to burnout.We will help you break bad habits and equip you with the skills to walk out the door unencumbered.Out-On-Time is a course for emergency physicians and clinicians that teaches shift efficiency and real-time documentation, enabling you to write fast, focused charts that bill well and are medicolegally sound.Learn More About The Out-On-Time Course We Discuss:The Cost of Interruptions in Emergency MedicineNot All Interruptions Are UrgentThe Cognitive Cost of Task SwitchingBecoming a Non-Interruptible ClinicianDeferring Without Alienating Your TeamProtecting Focus at the End of the ShiftFixing the EKG Interruption ProblemAsynchronous Communication That Actually Works
Feb 2
41 min

So many of our choices are shaped less by desire and more by expectation. We chase prestige, status, or recognition, only to arrive and realize we were climbing the wrong ladder. Beneath burnout and the friction, there’s often the truth that we were never pursuing what we truly wanted. In this episode, we explore the concept of mimetic desire, how it misguides our ambitions, and how to reclaim our decisions. Finally, we examine how fear of judgment and shame shape our careers more than we think, and what it takes to break free.Guest bio: Josh Russell, MD, is double board-certified in Emergency Medicine and Palliative Care. He’s held leadership roles as a Chief Medical Officer in telehealth, artificial intelligence, and urgent care systems. He’s an experienced clinician, writer, educator, and medical editor with a passion for making complex topics accessible. LinkedIn article that spurred this podcastJosh’s WebsiteWe Discuss:Mimetic Desire: Chasing What Others WantThe Trap of “Should”: Internalized ShameThe Concentric Circles of StressorsFinding What You Really WantThe Ladder Against the Wrong WallActionable Reflection PracticesMentioned in this episode:Awake and Aware | March 1-4, 2026Our annual retreat. Scottsdale, AZ. If you want to recalibrate and reset, this is for you. Registration closes Feb 14, 2026.Learn More HereDoctoring Done Well | Bite-Sized WinsEvery other week, a few minutes of career-elevating insight delivered straight to your inbox.
The Doctoring Done Well Newsletter is never lame, never spammy, and always fresh.Sign up for our Newsletter
Jan 20
26 min

What if the true test of strength is focusing less on what we feel and more on what we do? In this episode, we explore a practical philosophy of action, presence, and personal agency with Dan Millman, author of Way of the Peaceful Warrior. Finally, we dig into how small mindset shifts can transform both high-stakes moments and the quiet struggles of everyday life.Guest bio: Dan Millman is a world champion athlete turned author, educator, and teacher of practical wisdom. With a background that spans competitive sports, university-level coaching, martial arts, and academic instruction, Dan brings a rare blend of physical discipline and philosophical insight to his work.Following two decades of spiritual exploration, he developed what would become known as the Peaceful Warrior’s Way, an action-based approach to living with purpose. Dan is the author of 18 books, including the international bestseller Way of the Peaceful Warrior, which was adapted into a feature film. His writings have reached millions across 29 languages and continue to influence readers around the world.We Discuss:Peaceful Warrior Philosophy in ActionWhat We Control (And What We Don’t)Action Over EmotionThe Three Rules of Wise LivingThe Power of Present Moment AwarenessMastery Through Deliberate PracticePurpose as a Practical ToolGrowth Without PerfectionWorking Within Broken SystemsPracticing LifeMentioned in this episode:Free Tools To Make Medical Practice EasierNo fluff. Just good stuff.Free Resources LinkOur 2026 Retreat in Scottsdale, ArizonaMarch 1-4. Change how you see yourself, experience your work with joy, and build mental excellence.Learn More HereDoctoring Done Well | Bite-Sized WinsEvery other week, a few minutes of career-elevating insight delivered straight to your inbox.
The Doctoring Done Well Newsletter is never lame, never spammy, and always fresh.Sign up for our Newsletter
Dec 29, 2025
1 hr 6 min
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