Categories
Being human Medicine Reflections on Life, Being Human, and Medicine Reflections on the Christian Life

Burnout. The Sequel. Or – Answers and Treatments.

In the end of my post on burnout, I asked for your input. Based on that I feel compelled to write once more. This is a longer post but please bear with me. I think you will find something of value in it for you.

As a result of the first post on burnout, the vast majority did what I had really hoped you would do.

  • Recognized the burnout or tendencies toward burnout in yourself. (Everyone has this, by the way.)
  • Thought about what can or should be done within your life.
  • Banded together as “brothers” in the battle.

Some of you were deeply concerned for me. This was very nice but made me want to reassure you. I am far less worried about me than I am about my friends and colleagues. 

I am the one who has been given a forced sabbatical. I am the one who has had such fatigue from my surgery and treatments that I have been forced to sleep. In fact, I have slept more recently than I have been able to sleep in years. This period on short term disability is the longest period that I have not worked in my entire adolescent or adult life.

I am also the one whose mind has been reopened and regained the ability to think and write. This blog is what happens when you let Mike have a little too much free time! J

What my post did (several thousand views), was to open up and expose a wound. 

Like a surgical debridement, it seemed to expose the raw but living tissue under some layers of scar. And like a surgeon, once I cut down and could see the raw granulation tissue it made me happy. There is healthy and living tissue underneath.The pain that you feel and the longing to live a full and rich life is a sign of health. It is the essence of you that remains. Deep down you are there. You are very much alive.

For the non-medical, what does this talk of debridement mean? 

Sometimes when someone has a wound, devitalized tissue (scar tissue or dead tissue) can form over the wound. The scar tissue blocks oxygen from the wound. It can make it hard or even impossible for the wound to heal. In those cases, a surgeon has to do a debridement. This is when they use a scalpel and cut into the tissue. They carefully peel back layers of tissue that are no longer alive to get to the tissue that is still vital and alive. The layers the surgeon remove might seem as though they are providing a covering or protection to the wound. But in reality, they are just hurting the healthy tissue and preventing it from healing. 

That was my intention of the post. By openly sharing my pain and struggle, I hoped to open up your wounds as well.

And now that the surgeon has opened the wound we must proceed with the next step. We must protect the wound and see if we can truly help it to heal. 

This makes me nervous. In terms of burnout, I am better, but I am living not in reality and I do not yet know that I am cured. I do not know if I am yet competent to apply the salve or the sterile dressing that could best help with the healing. I am empowered by dozens of comments and messages. I feel an obligation to attempt the wound dressing because I was part of cutting the wound open again. I also feel an obligation to tabulate or collect the wisdom that was shared with me and reflect it back to you.

Image result for salve on a wound
https://www.wikihow.com/images/thumb/d/df/Treat-Deep-Cuts-Step-7-Version-2.jpg/aid9471077-v4-728px-Treat-Deep-Cuts-Step-7-Version-2.jpg

What are the next steps?

How can everyone go forward with sustainability and joy and balance and without guilt?

  1. Pray for wisdom.That is the very first step. Pray for wisdom to live the life that you ought to live. Do not just live the life that others tell you to live. Live the life that the Lord has intended you to live. What is your role in this life? Do you have a vocation (a calling)? What is your drive and desire? What is your role in this life and how can you do that in a full and rich way? 
  • Passion:Indulge in passion. I have learned over and over again that experiences that you do fully are much better than those that you try to minimize. 

As a teen I had the job of driving the forklift forward to catch the cherries off of the cherry shaker (harvester). Honestly, it could be a dull job. Drive forward. Wait. Drive backward. Wait. Repeat. Do that a LOT of times over and over and over and over again.

Image result for cherry shaker harvest
https://thumbs.gfycat.com/ScarceFrayedHawaiianmonkseal-size_restricted.gif
While this is showing tart cherry harvesting in Washington rather than Michigan I thought the gif file was pretty cool!

This job however became much better when I pretended to be the best cherry tank forklift driver ever! Could I get the tank in place as soon as possible? Could I pull in perfectly each time? What would the world’s greatest cherry tank driver do? That I was going to aspire to. And suddenly the job got much better. 

For whatever you do, please do not shrink away. Own it and dominate it. Seek passion within yourself and exert that passion. If you have to deal with difficult patients or difficult situations ask yourself, “What would an expert in this situation do? How would the BEST person handle this? Can I become the expert? Can I be the BEST!”

  • Live:Do not be afraid to live. Do not feel guilty to live. As I have said repeatedly and as was sent back to me in so many different messages and ways – live. 

What does this mean? It means feel, taste, smell, see, and hear what you are experiencing right now. Stop at least 5 times a day to just live. Stop yourself and take in the world with all of your senses. Like you might do if you felt it was your last chance to do so. Or do it as if you were allowed to come back from the future to get to relive an experience one more time. Truly experience it. 

In this moment I feel the chill in the air. I see the pale light of the one click on the 3-way light and the empty shelves my wife made last night in her work to redecorate for Christmas. (I wrote this in the decorating gap between Thanksgiving and Christmas.)  I smell little but the familiar smell of our home. I hear the clock in the background and the sigh of our beagle, Malley. Ok – I don’t taste much – which reminds me that I could go get a cup of coffee! But nonetheless – these past 10 seconds were rich. They made me love this moment. This time at 5:10 am when I am awake and not able to sleep, I now love. As a future time-traveler coming back to this moment I would relish in these familiar 5 sense experiences of my present home. Why then should I not similarly enjoy them now?

Look across the table at your spouse or your children. Look at the beauty in their eyes. Look at their supple skin. Look at the curve of their mouth when they smile. Indulge in it. Smell the food. Savor the taste as you put the food in your mouth. Hear the giggles or the beautiful tone of their voices. Reach out and touch them. Feel their silky hair or the soft skin of their hand. Perhaps the hand is older and wrinkled. Enjoy how you have gained those wrinkles together. Recall the first moments you held hands and when the hand was clammy with nervousness. Smile inside as you richly drink in this full experience. 


Decide that you are going to remove the blinders and force yourself to stop at least 5 times a day to just LIVE.

There will never be enough time. Can you be so brave to live in the time that you have?

  • Seek treatment more than a cure:This is a hard but important lesson. In patients with chronic pain we are taught that if they seek to be pain-free they will never get better. If they seek to be pain free, the psychological focus shifts onto their pain and it begins to dominate their lives even more. Instead, we are to ask them to focus on living their lives. 

The focus of treatment is to be able to do more and more. The focus must be to regain functional capacity rather than to be pain free.

So also, must we do with our burnout. The harsh reality is that this world is a fallen and broken world. 

The Bible tells us, “Cursed is the ground because of you; through painful toil you will eat food from it all the days of your life. It will produce thorns and thistles for you, and you will eat the plants of the field. By the sweat of your brow, you will eat your food…[1]

I don’t mean to not be cheery but whatever job you do, it eventually will become work. Your goal is not to escape toil for it is not possible. Your goal is to seek a better life within it. I cannot fully make your pain go away. I cannot relieve you of work. I cannot at this moment take away the electronic health record (EHR.) I cannot make call nights go away. But I can encourage you to enjoy your life nonetheless. Focus on living better. Accept that some pain and toil are a part of what it means to be human. But please don’t let them dominate your mind or your life. Do not drive yourself crazy by trying to be pain free. Do not seek a perfect life. It does not exist. Seek to live a good life amidst the toil and pain and brokenness. This is indeed possible.

  • Celebrate:Celebrate the good that you have done. Do not brush away the successes. Relish them. Keep them in front of you as reminders. There are always good things that you have been a part of. Without guilt, indulge in experiencing them. Perhaps it is the patient who you really helped, or the project that was finally completed. Save a memento or some icon that will help you to remember it.[2]Say to yourself, “This! This is why I do what I do!” 
  • Band of brothers:  From the Shakespearean play Henry V:

“We few, we happy few, we band of brothers; For he to-day that sheds his blood with me; Shall be my brother; be he ne’er so vile, This day shall gentle his condition; And gentlemen in England now-a-bed Shall think themselves accursed they were not here, And hold their manhoods cheap whiles any speaks, That fought with us upon Saint Crispin’s day.”[3]

Image result for henry v st crispin's day speech
https://i.vimeocdn.com/video/634683697_1280x720.jpg

Do NOT – I repeat – Do NOT – do this alone. We can and must band together as a happy band of brothers (and sisters). You must have friends at work. Indulge in their presence. Indulge together in the challenges and thereby the glories in which you work. Think and fight together to make things better. Celebrate the ways that you stand up under the pressure together. Do not seek to run and hide but seek to stand up together under the strain and know that there is glory in that for you and them.

Within our advanced heart failure section, my favorite meeting is the early morning meeting that we have once a month when we meet at a coffee shop. It is generally without an agenda but is mostly a chance for us to gather as a “band of brothers and sister.[4]” This has power because we are in it all together.

Honestly, Henry V is one of my favorite Shakespearean plays purely because of this scene. Get the movie and watch it or search out the St Crispin’s Day speech on YouTube. Go ahead and do it now. Turn the sound up. Stand up as you listen. The scene gives me chills and inspires me. Even now I feel stronger just thinking of it! Perhaps you should bookmark it on your web browser and then in times of struggle, pull it up with your colleagues and play it before you charge off to work! 

  • Change jobs or retire:This is what some of you have done. Most are not able to do this. I am never one to recommend running away from your problems but for some this is the best solution. Only you can tell if this is the correct path for you. But for those who do not do this – please – do not just wait to retire. Please live your lives today. You cannot get yesterday back. Live today so that you can celebrate the yesterday in which you just lived.

Burnout is an epidemic. There are some things that are a huge part of the cause. I do not mean to lament the burden of charting in an electronic health record but this is one large factor. We must seek to fight to improve this. It will not go away but we must constantly fight against the current state. 

And I hope the few suggestions above will provide some benefit to you?

There is one other solution, but I do not recommend it. It has something to do with getting diagnosed with cancer, a laparotomy, radiation and chemo and several weeks off of work. It does work. But I think the ideas from my prior post plus your collective ideas in items 1-7 above are more desirable than that! 

To my own band of brothers (and sisters): I miss you! I hope to soon rejoin the battle. Please know that you have my respect and appreciation. You few. You happy few!


[1]Genesis 3:17-19 (NIV)

[2]Please see my LinkedIn post, “Nice Shoes”. Those shoes are an important icon to me to remind me to celebrate my career. https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/nice-shoes-michael-dickinson/

[3]St. Crispin’s Day speech, Henry V, William Shakespeare, 1599

[4]We love you Milena! We need more sisters like you with us in cardiology and AHF! 

Categories
Being human Reflections on the Christian Life

We Have a Beautiful Christmas Tree

We have a beautiful Christmas tree this year. But I couldn’t appreciate it yesterday. There were so many things to do. I worried that it didn’t have enough water. First, I jumped up to add water to it. Then all of the presents to open. We had to get through all of them. And there was breakfast and then clean up and lunch and to get to all the rest that we needed to do.

We all know the routine. We fill our days with so many good things that we struggle to taste and enjoy them all.

This morning I am happy. 

This morning I was able to enjoy the Christmas tree. 

I am sitting and looking at the intricate detail. The tiny little ornaments and the reflected lights. There is so much to look at. But it is not overwhelming in this moment. It is just a joy to take it in and not to have to stress or worry about anything in particular.

How could I get to this place today when I couldn’t yesterday?

It is the quiet of the morning and no one else is awake yet (other than our beagle and she is mostly sleeping again anyhow!) I was able to sip a cup of coffee and read from my Bible. 

This morning I read from the book of Daniel. In it I read of the dream of king Nebuchadnezzar. This dream was an amazing and grand dream. It encompassed all of human history and told of the many kingdoms that would come and go. In the end they would all become as dust on the threshing floor when the final kingdom is established.

I asked myself, “Why did the Lord give this dream? Why did Nebuchadnezzar need this? And why do we need this?” 

The answer came in the form of the Christmas tree in front of me. 

The world is filled with complexities along with so many things to do and think about. We rush around and fill our days with activities. We build empires. These empires are the most important things to us it seems. But while they may last for a season, they will eventually become dust. They will pass away. They will become as dust on the threshing floor. They will all be blown away. But in their place, we will have something permanent and right and true. We won’t be bothered or care about the others blowing away because of what replaces it. It will be right and true.

We can rest in this knowledge. We can pause and stop running around. We can sit and enjoy and know that there is a plan.

I can relax. I can look at the lights on the Christmas tree not worrying about the details. I can just enjoy them. I can look with wonder at the intricate details of the many ornaments. (Sarah loves Christmas ornaments.) I can just enjoy them. And for the 1sttime today I can feel peace. I do not have to do everything or rush or hurry. I can and should stop and enjoy.

It is a hard feeling to communicate. I don’t know if I can adequately do so, but I will try.

There are lots of things for you to obsess or worry about today. There are lots of activities that you feel that you must get done. There are so many good things for you to do today. But for one moment can you understand that they are all temporary? What seems so important in this moment is perhaps not as important as you might think. 

Can you break free for one moment? Can you keep the forces of the now from robbing you from a single moment of enjoyment and peace? As I type this the clocks chime at me. They are yelling at me that time is passing. But I am going to be strong. I am going to ignore them and fight against them. I am not going to let them rob me of the now.

Can you do the same? Can you understand that there is a greater plan and that there are greater days to come? It is enough for now to pause and enjoy what is in front of you. Just look at the lights on the tree. Look with a sense of fun and joy and peace at the ornaments and how they reflect. Or look at the small and intricate ones buried in the inside of the tree. 

The “things” that you have to do will all be gone as a puff of dust. You will later get to a day by the graciousness of God and by his redeeming power when we can enjoy the world. If we are His children and accept Him and His grace, then He will bring us to that day. It will be a day when all the “things” suddenly make sense. We will get to slow down and taste and see and hear and enjoy them all. We won’t be struggling or running with frantic things to do. We can enjoy His creation in the way that He intended.  

But for now, He gives us glimpses of that day. For me it is in the Christmas tree in front of me. 

I didn’t fill the water up yet. I can do that later. I am just sitting and looking at it. I am not trying to figure it all out. I am just enjoying it and feeling a sense of deep peace. God is in charge. All the things that worry me are temporary. They will be blown away as dust. For now, I can just sit and enjoy. I can dream of the day when we finally will be able to just enjoy the world. We won’t be sick or tired. We won’t feel loss or grief. We won’t be stressed over building empires. We will be happy to be together. Every blade of grass and every leaf on the trees and every curving hill will bring beauty and enjoyment and peace to all of us.

For now, it is enough to look and breathe and enjoy the Christmas tree.

We have a beautiful Christmas tree this year.