Weary and Discouraged? Maybe You're a Jerk Like me!

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When things don't go as we want or plan discouragement can quickly follow. It is easy to think that if we could change our circumstances our discouragement would go away. Unfortunately, changing our circumstances often requires that we change ourselves.

I want to be a great doctor. Good isn't good enough. I want to be the best and always have which is why for years patient satisfaction surveys were incredibly discouraging. I remember when I got my first survey results from the medical group. According to the survey I was average, smack dab in the middle of the pack. I was depressed. How could that be? I had worked so hard at doing everything right, harder than the doctors I worked with, but I scored lower. What happened?

What happened was that although I was practicing good medicine, consistently doing what was right for my patients and prescribing appropriate treatment, I was falling short in a key area.

I was a jerk.

Not intentionally, I actually cared about people. In spite of my caring I was at times arrogant and condescending . I knew the advice I was giving was correct so I did not have enough patience for patients who were fearful or uncertain, I a result I came across as brusque and uncaring . I loved medicine and I loved people, but the truth was I loved them a lot more when they agreed with me! When they didn't... well, not as much.

I could chalk up my poor scores to many things, but the core problem was me. I lacked true compassion and as a result did not listen and respond in a loving way. I had too high a view of myself and too low a view of others. For patient perceptions to improve, I needed to change. This was not easy, as pride and confidence in my opinion were deeply ingrained. Yet if my discouragement over my evaluations was going to end there was no choice. I needed to lay aside my pride, my sinful self-righteousness.

Turns out that the writer of the book of Hebrews figured this out long before I did. As he encouraged people to hang on and endure the trials of life he told them that to avoid spiritual weariness  they would need to throw away the thing that tripped them up, the sin that “clings so closely”.

We tend to blame God when we trip up, but it is never His fault. So often when I am discouraged the root cause is my own stupid sin. (Is there any other kind?)

About 5 years ago I started praying, purposefully and intentionally, that God would help me love my patients and be more kind. (It probably does not come as a surprise to anyone else, but I learned that listening and caring are a part of love and kindness!) God worked in my life by allowing me to become a patient myself, to struggle with anxiety and pain. I learned from my daughter as I watched her deal with health and emotional issues, seeing how hard she worked for baby steps of progress. With these new experiences came a change of heart that allowed me to throw aside my arrogance and pride and become a more caring physician. I still try to do the right thing in all circumstances and work hard to get my diagnosis and treatment plans correct, but now it is in the context of caring about patients and making sure their concerns are heard. I have changed

Once I laid aside my self-righteousness and sense of superiority, my survey results improved and my discouragement evaporated. For the last four years I have consistently rated in the top 10 percent of the doctors in my medical group.

How about that? So often it is when we insist on doing things our own way and hang on to sinful thoughts and behaviors that we get discouraged. The writer of Hebrews told us what we need to do in such situations. We need to throw these bad things away!  We need to change!

This is the fourth post of a series on Dealing with Discouragement. If you have been touched by these posts, please share them with a friend. If you would like to subscribe to this blog and receive future posts by email, click on the subscribe link. Beneath my photo upper right on a computer screen or scroll to the bottom on your mobile device.

Do You Deserve a Parenting Award?

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Think of the awards and recognition you have received in your life and why they were valuable. So often awards we labor for seem less important over time. Some of the best awards are ones we never expected and were never directly pursued.

As with many doctors, over the course of my education and career I have accumulated various accolades and awards. Some of them have pretty impressive titles, with words such as outstanding, best, and “of the year” emblazoned on them. Most of them, while meaningful when received, have been long forgotten by those who gave them.

This Christmas I was blessed with a unexpected recognition that has special value. In early December my 18 year-old daughter came to my wife and I one evening and announced the gift that topped her Christmas list- 2 tickets to see the pop boy band One Direction in concert. They are doing a show at the Rose Bowl on her birthday in September and the tickets were going on sale the following week.

"I want to go!" She said, and then she turned to me. "And Daddy I want you to go with me, because you will sing the songs with me and I think I will have more fun with you than anyone else!"

Pretty Awesome. I will take "One Direction Concert Partner" from my daughter over a medical award any day. Lots of doctors win medical awards. How many are their child's concert buddy? 

This is a simple reminder of a goal that should be shared by all parents. As our children grow up and are able to decide what to do and who to do it with we should hope that we will be a viable option for them. If you wonder if you would be on your child’s buddy list for a special event ask yourself this question- “Is my child on my buddy list?”  If you don’t choose their company chances are they won’t choose yours!

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Discouraged by Yelp! More on Dealing With Discouragement

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 Recently I discovered a rather brutal review of my practice on Yelp. (You can go read it if you are so inclined.) In this mother's opinion I am a great evil and a threat to children. Her words hurt. I try so hard to love the patients in my practice, especially the children. It was clear that in her case I failed miserably. Discouragement raised its head, as did anger and fear. What could I do?

A key for dealing with and preventing discouragement in Hebrews 12 is found in verse 1. The writer says, “Let us lay aside every weight, and the sin that clings so closely” (ESV).

Every weight- some things just weight us down in our the race of life. For me, the things that slow me down and discourage me include doubt, fear and past hurts.

Past hurts have been particularly hard for me at times. I have been let down by so many people- parents, friends, an even in the church often frequently by pastors and leaders. To quote those great theologians Simon and Garfunkle, “it's the same old story, everywhere I go, I've been slandered, libeled, I hear words I never hear in the Bible!”.

When I dwell on these things. I feel like quitting. Who wants to keep running when it seems you are just running into pain? But God says that we can't hang on to these things.

We have to lay them aside.

The English term “lay aside” is a little softer than what I think the original Greek word implies. I think “Throw far away” might be better. We need to throw these things far away from us, far enough away that they can't slow us down.

This is not easy. Especially for someone like me who suffers from anxiety disorder. I cling to hurts instead of throwing them away. Worse, my anxiety disorder can make little things hurt a lot.

So what could I do with Yelp! induced pain? I shared it with others, received encouragement, and set it aside. I decided to just do the best I could to keep loving and serving my patients, learn from the mistake and went on.

Where in the past I would have dwelt on it for days or weeks, I moved on. As I did I realized that I was not perfect, and that this is okay with God, and with many of my patients. I focused on the smiles and positive interactions gained hope. By setting the pain aside and focusing on the positive a discouragement that before would have lasted a while faded away.

Is there something you need to lay aside? Do it! Sometimes letting go is the first step in moving on!

This is the third post of a series on Dealing with Discouragement. If you have been touched by these posts, please share them with a friend. If you would like to subscribe to this blog and receive future posts by email, click on the subscribe link. Beneath my photo upper right on a computer screen or scroll to the bottom on your mobile device.

How to deal with Discouragement- Part 1

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Every once in a while a patient comes in with depression with a story that once heard causes me to think, “I'd be depressed too!” Had one of those visits recently. A man in his late 70's came in with depression. In the last year he had struggled with a rare cancer that required uncomfortable radiation treatments and the collapse of a replaced hip. The hip was replaced 7 weeks earlier in a massive reconstruction that required him to bear no weight at all for months. An avid athlete, this was a tough pill to swallow. A few weeks into his recovery he came down with a severe pneumonia that nearly did him in and required an 8 day stay in the hospital, sapping what little strength remained. He was emotionally and physically exhausted, deeply depressed and discouraged.

As we talked I thought of a sermon on depression I have preached several times. The sermon, titled “Dealing with Discouragement," seems to resonate with so many people, because everyone struggles with discouragement. The principles are universal and worth sharing and were helpful to him that day. In the hope that they may help others I will be sharing them in the coming posts.

Reading Hebrews 12 one of the things that jumps out are the repeated exhortations to not give up. In verse 1 the author tells the readers that they should "run with endurance the race that is set before them." In the running analogy he is suggesting that we remember life is a long race and fatigue is common- It seems to me that he would not say endurance was needed unless we were going to be running for a while!

It reminds me of lessons I learned from watching my brothers run track and field. They ran the 800 meters and cross country, and it is a fact of running that sprinting out to the lead is not a good way to win a long race. Sprinters tire quickly and are seldom in front at the end. It seems the author was saying the faithful life is like that. If we treat it like a sprint, expecting it to be over soon, we will be disappointed.

Later in the chapter we are told that as we run we are to consider what Jesus endured in His life, so we will "not grow weary and lose heart." Sounds like there must be a danger of getting tired and discouraged! This is a common theme in scripture. Reading through the New Testament we are often reminded to stand firm, persevere, and endure to the end. We would not be repeatedly reminded to hang in there if dropping out was not a real possibility. Life is often hard!

It sounds funny, but it is encouraging for me to know that I am not the only person who battles discouragement! If you are feeling discouraged, you are not alone either and encouragement is available.

The Bible gives us ways to deal with this discouragement and we will be covering these in the next few posts.

This is the first post of a series on Dealing with Discouragement. If you have been touched by this post, please share it with a friend. If you would like to subscribe to this blog and receive future posts by email, click on the subscribe link. Beneath my photo upper right on a computer screen or scroll to the bottom on your mobile device.