In this insightful episode of The Health Fix Podcast, I sit down with Dr. Ben Reinking, a board-certified pediatric cardiologist, medical educator, and certified physician development coach. Dr. Ben is the founder of The Developing Doctor, a coaching business inspired by his own journey through burnout and the challenges he observed in the healthcare profession. His mission is to help healthcare professionals rediscover joy and purpose in their careers. This episode is essential for anyoneโwhether in the health field or beyondโfeeling the pull to escape their life or career.
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What Youโll Learn:
- The Power of Self-Check-In
Why asking yourself, “Am I okay?” is a critical first step in identifying burnout. - Escapist Fantasies as Burnout Clues
Recognizing thoughts of escape as signals of burnout and exploring their deeper meaning. - Physical Symptoms of Burnout
How burnout manifests physically and the importance of recognizing these symptoms early. - Reconnecting with Joy in Your Career
The value of assessing if your career aligns with your core self and brings joy and fulfillment. - The Role of Hobbies and Interests
How nurturing activities beyond your career builds resilience and identity beyond work. - Naming Your Emotions
How identifying what youโre feeling can help you process and manage emotions more effectively.
Resources from the Show:
- Dr. Ben Reinkingโs Website: The Developing Doctor
- Instagram: @thedevelopingdoctor
- Strengths Assessments:
- VIA Strengths
- CliftonStrengths
- Special Offer: Use code โhealthfix30โ for 30% off coaching sessions and any courses.
Tune in for a practical and empowering conversation that sheds light on the burnout epidemic and offers actionable steps for reclaiming joy, purpose, and well-being.
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Podcast Transcript
4:15 – Dr. Benโs story
8:27 – Doctor training on self care?
9:53 – What sings does Dr. Ben see now in his progression into being burned out?
14:29 – Removing certain apps from your phone for inner peace
15:46 – Helpful tips to overcome โF itโ mode
16:57 – Navigating the โlearning phaseโ of life
18:18 – Dr. Krauseโs backstory
19:19 – Leaning into your strength values
21:10 – Focusing on the destination rather than the journey
22:06 – Dr. Benโs traits that kept him going to the point of burnout
26:53 – Fear of calling in sick or taking vacation
28:46 – Anxiety towards the end of vacation
29:!0 – Building in a buffer day before returning to work
31:08 – Techniques to overcome the day before scaryโs
31:59 – Taking a lunch
34:39 – Signs of burnout
37:48 – Setting boundaries
42:30 – Guilt free choices when looking at self care
44:14 – Benโs programs
45:22 – Emotional intelligence
48:33 – Communicating with coworkers
50:45 – Where to find Ben Reinking online
[Preview] And I think the first thing that’s helpful is to just reconnect with who are you,
why are you doing what you’re doing and does it still bring you joy and fulfillment?
And once you can answer those questions, then it’s easier to make changes.
And sometimes the changes really are big, like blow up your life, kind of.
I need to make a huge change because this isn’t working for me.
But many other times at small, small things that we don’t even recognize
will make a big difference.
And that process of going into work and just getting the work done,
didn’t work anymore because I was doing way more than I was capable of,
capable of physically, spiritually and emotionally.
And I didn’t even recognize it until someone pulled me inside and said, Hey,
are you okay?
And you know, I hadn’t even stopped to ask myself that question.
Am I okay?
But it was just that simple question that caused me to stop and pause and say,
you know what? Really? I’m not.
JANNINE: On this episode of the Health Fix podcast.
I’m interviewing Ben Reinking.
He is a board certified pediatric cardiologist.
He’s a medical educator and certified
physician development coach, as well as the owner of the developing doctor.
He’s a partner.
He’s a stepfather, dog owner, gardener, Iowa Hawkeye fan and want to be writer.
Me too, Ben, me too.
Now here’s the thing.
I was drawn to Ben because of his coaching business.
And I feel like it’s so needed right now in the physician space,
but also in anyone who’s in healthcare, who’s a nurse,
who’s a, you know, nursing assistant, anyone front desk.
Like we in the healthcare industry are really struggling at the moment,
but I also want to extend it to folks who are just in the daily grind, right?
Unfortunately, I’m seeing a lot of clients that are coming in and telling me,
like, “Hey, Doc, I’m working the job of two or three people.
I can’t really do this.
I can’t take care of my health.
I can’t make meals.
I mean, I can’t even take breaks.
I mean, there’s so many things.”
And they’re getting to the point where they’re feeling like they need to escape
their life or career or find something else to do.
Now, if this resonates with you, this podcast is for you.
I was drawn to Ben in particular from his Instagram post that was
the lies I’ve told myself.
And really it boiled down to him saying,
I’m not a good doctor because I called in sick,
took a vacation, wasn’t available for someone who needed me.
I’ve felt that way myself.
I felt guilty to tell people I was going on vacation.
But it’s reality, right?
And I think for a lot of people,
they feel guilty about taking breaks at work.
They feel guilty about taking vacations from work.
If this is you, this podcast is for you.
And I want you to think about during the podcast, you know, whether this resonates with you
or maybe if you’re going to send it to someone, a family member, a friend that needs to hear
this, really I want you to ask, are you okay?
And if not, what needs to change to get you to feeling better?
So with that, let’s introduce you to Dr. Ben Reinking.
[Intro] Welcome to The Health Fix Podcast, where health junkies get their weekly
fix of tips, tools, and techniques to have limitless energy, sharp
minds, and fit, physiques, or life.
JANNINE: Dr. Ben Reinking, welcome to The Health Fix Podcast.
DR. BEN: Thank you, Dr. Jannine.
I’m so happy to be here.
JANNINE: Gosh, you know, I love what you do.
I’m just gonna say that.
And I also, you guys, I told them,
I was like, where were you like right about before COVID?
Maybe somewhere around 2018, 2019,
where things were really starting to, let’s say amplify
in my Dr. Burnout, Dr. Anxiety situation.
So, so Ben, tell us a little bit about how you came
to create your programs, your courses, everything you’re doing right now to help doctors who are
just struggling, let’s just say it.
DR. BEN: Yeah, I mean, I can share a little bit of my story, but I think
really it comes down to the question like, who’s going to help the helpers, right? So we’re all
human and we all have moments when we need help. And that includes the helpers, physicians or
or whatever your role is.
So I don’t know that my story is very unique
compared to others, but I think it’s helpful to hear it.
You know, I was one of the fortunate people
where I went through my medical training
and what I was doing worked for the most part.
And I’m old enough that people didn’t really talk
about burnout when I was in training.
Everyone said it’s tough and it’s supposed to be tough,
but you can do it and get through it.
And when it’s hard, just put your head down
and keep working.
And that worked for me until it didn’t.
And so three things happened in my life
that sort of combined, I think, to just cause things to implode.
One was a positive thing.
So my partner and I had been long distance for a long time,
and we built a house.
And so it was a really great positive change in my life,
but it was also a little bit stressful.
My parents suddenly hadn’t known
unless my mom was in a tragic car accident.
Thankfully, she’s fine.
And then my dad had a diagnosis of cancer.
He also was fine now, but so big change in my personal life.
And then my professional life, I’m a pediatric cardiologist
by trade.
And we depend on this big multidisciplinary team.
And my team fell apart.
And as a result of that, a lot of the colleagues
that I’d worked with for 10 years or so
and had great relationships just left.
And so I found myself doing more work.
And all of a sudden, all of the people that I really liked seeing every day were gone.
And that process of going into work and just getting the work done didn’t work anymore,
because I was doing way more than I was capable of,
capable of physically, spiritually, and emotionally.
And I didn’t even recognize it until someone pulled me inside and said,
“Hey, are you okay?” And, you know, I hadn’t even stopped to ask myself that question.
am I okay? But it was just that simple question that caused me to stop and pause and say, you know
what, really, I’m not. And that led to me making all sorts of changes. But that was the catalyst.
JANNINE: You know, I think you brought up two really important things that happened in the medical field,
changes in team, which I see it all the time, whether practices are being dissolved and taken
over by a bigger conglomerate, or we’ve got folks moving on. It is hard. When I’ve worked in a team,
in the past. Yeah, when people would get sick, they’d leave, you know, things that happen.
It shifts the dynamic and can be very hard. And I think for a lot of people right now,
with a lot of shifts since the pandemic, a lot of people are doing two, three jobs because
the company’s not hiring someone else on. And I’m hearing that a lot in my clients. And
so their team has shifted. They’re doing more work. And it’s definitely something that,
you know, we’re like, I can do this because I think a lot of us have that like drive,
right, especially if we’re in a field where we take care of people.
But we also feel like no, you’re not even to think about am I okay?
Because and this is where my mind was when you said that, like we don’t think
about it because we’re too busy trying to survive.
We’re just trying to do the things and help the people because that’s what we do.
You know, on repeat.
Does that seem like where the mindset was before you were like, am I okay?
DR. BEN: Yeah, exactly.
I mean, I think it’s you spend so much energy just getting through the day
that it’s hard to just stop and pause.
And I think I also recognize that I had never developed
the skills that I needed internally
to even ask myself that question, right?
So I didn’t even know how, nowhere to start.
JANNINE: Yeah, same thing here.
When things were kind of hitting the fan for me, right?
Before COVID and going into COVID, yeah.
Like I had moved into my own practice.
I was solo at that point.
Nobody to like kind of realize like, are you okay?
You know?
And so yeah, I don’t think we even,
there was no mention even,
I mean, I went to naturopathic medicine school
compared to conventional medical school.
And yes, there was this program
like the first year about like taking care of yourself.
But by the time you get to the fourth year,
I think that’s out the window.
Did you guys get anything about self-care
or any training in terms of taking care of you?
DR. BEN: I don’t think we did, honestly.
I mean, I know we had some professionalism courses,
but I don’t think when I was going through,
there was much talk about self-care.
I think that really started towards the end of my training
when people realized that,
“Oh, this is a problem for providers
and it’s a problem for patients
because the providers aren’t doing well.”
JANNINE: Right, right.
And I think you just brought up a really good point.
And this is something that I do like to kind of put out
to my clients and especially for the folks
who are audience members right now.
like, guys, sometimes you’re having care by someone
who is really not okay, like does not feel okay.
Does not, you know, mentally is really burnt out
and we’ll get this, you know,
ah, the medical system sucks.
Ah, the doctors don’t care.
And it’s like, I don’t think anybody goes
into the medical field, not caring.
I think everybody wants to make a difference.
I think we end up having a hard time
being able to juggle with workload
and things of that nature.
I know you’ve seen it and–
DR. BEN: Absolutely, right, yeah.
JANNINE: It’s something that I see a lot.
Now, in your progression of how you’re waking up
and going like, “Oh man, am I okay?
“What’s going on?”
What kind of things did you see where red flags to you
about yourself in terms of your behaviors?
How the practice kind of was going,
how seeing clients was going,
like what kind of little things stood out to you?
like, oh, that’s not good.
And maybe even though it’s doctor,
it’s still relevant to anyone else out there
in the end of the existence.
DR. BEN: Yeah, great question.
And I think I didn’t recognize any of these signs
at the moment, but looking back, I was like,
wow, that’s not normal.
So one was a thought.
So I had just this fantasy of just escaping.
And so I walked to work and I would frequently wonder
walking to work like, what would happen
if I just kept walking?
Like how long would it take for people
at work to figure out that,
oh, he didn’t show up?
Like would it be new?
Would it be three?
And I was like, can I try that?
And then on the way home,
I would, I live in Iowa,
I’m in the middle of nowhere,
but I would think,
could I make it to the beach on my feet?
Like, could I just keep walking
and make it to the beach?
And how long would that take?
And it’s like kind of a comical thought a little bit,
but it also was a very real thought in my head
that I was like, how many days would it take?
Could I physically do it?
Do I need to pack a backpack?
Right?
So it was just this fantasy of escape.
Even though I was gonna show up to work the next day,
it was this fantasy of escape.
JANNINE: It’s so interesting how you mentioned that.
It is.
I’ve been there thinking, you know,
what if I just, you know,
since my practice was in Washington,
I was thinking at the time,
what if I just drove to the water and like hijacked a boat?
DR. BEN: Yeah, right.
JANNINE: I just jumped on someone’s boat.
I don’t know what would happen, you know?
How, where could I go?
– what could I do. You know?
And I have heard that from other folks.
Women that I work with in particular,
a lot of times we’re juggling this,
is it hormones or is it burnout kind of question?
Because we’ll have that,
like I’ve done with my family, I’m quitting my career,
I’m going on a retreat or a sabbatical.
And it all kind of, how do we know?
Is it hormones, is it burnout?
So I go back to the question of your walk into work,
You know, you’re thinking maybe you could get lost
in a corn maze out there and I.
DR. BEN: Right.
(laughs)
JANNINE: Maybe I could get lost and never come back.
DR. BEN: Yeah, yeah.
JANNINE: Crazy stuff like that.
What other kind of thoughts,
what other kind of behaviors and things looking back
were you like, oh, maybe that was it too.
DR. BEN: Yeah, you know, I love that you mentioned the,
is it hormones, is it burnout?
Because there definitely was a physical side for me.
So one, I was just tense all the time.
At the time I had like, had my neck hurt,
back hurt, I had headaches, and I couldn’t sleep. And so I was in this constant state of
fight or flight really, and I mean, you know, that sympathetic nervous system, which probably
we don’t understand really well and underestimate how much it affects our behavior, but that sympathetic
nervous system was just an overdrive all the time. And you can’t physically, I would not like,
our sympathetic nervous system exists to help us when we’re stressed, right? And physically,
If I’m running for my bear, I would never expect myself to keep running continually and continually
and continually. But if it’s a mental or emotional task, for some reason, we have this expectation
that we need to keep doing it over and over again. But it’s the same level of stress, and the body
has the same response to it. We don’t respond to it appropriately though.
JANNINE: It’s so wild. It’s so wild. And I think for a lot of people, it’s different habits, behaviors
they take on. So we fantasize about escaping and then we somehow end up back at work or back
in the house with the family. And then there’s this either avoidance, there’s this. I’ll go from
personal experience and see how this resonates for you. And if you’ve noticed this with yourself
or other docs you’ve worked with, there’s this avoidance of where you’re like almost to the point
shaking to look at your email. You’re like, I don’t want another thing to do today. I don’t want
to look at the email. Yeah?
DR. BEN: Absolutely. Yeah. I mean, I can’t tell you how many times I’ve deleted
email from my phone. And then like the next, I was like, Oh, I actually really need to access
that again. But you know, it’s sort of like trying to make this big grand gesture like,
doing it. And then oh, yes, I really have to.
DR. BEN: Oh my gosh, that’s funny. I yeah, people get mad at
me a little bit because I don’t have my email on my phone because it was literally
like ping! ping! And I’m like, oh my gosh, you know, and it just amplifies, you know, the experience. So
do you recommend to some of the folks you’re coaching and working with? Do you recommend for
them to like take the email and take the contact or like even the EHR off their phone so that they’re
not getting paying to all day long?
DR. BEN: Absolutely. It’s a great suggestion. I think, you know,
We talked about these big grand gestures like escaping,
which is sort of this big,
almost blow up your life type event to get out of work,
but frequently it’s smaller things that you can do
and easily incorporate in your day
that don’t take much effort or time
that make a really big difference
and removing email from your phone is a great, great option.
JANNINE: Let’s talk about blowing up your life for a minute again,
just because it is such a big theme that I hear
and there’s the concept of midlife crisis.
Obviously we only enough to get to midlife to have it.
Cause what I saw you guys with, with, um, Dr.
Ben’s website, it’s called the developing doctor.com on there.
He’s, he’s talking about pre-med, like med students, like he’s covering all the
basis of where you could be like, I’m just blowing my life up.
Like it’s, it’s just forget about it.
So when you start thinking these thoughts, like one of the easy techniques, yes,
take the email off, take the things that notify you of different things.
What are some of the other things that you’ve really found to be incredibly
helpful when you get in that like, let’s call it “F it” mode.
DR. BEN: Yeah, yeah.
Um, you know, I, um, the hard thing is, is frequently it’s a big
systemic cause that leads to people to feel this way.
There’s some external factor that we can’t control that leads, leads to
these feelings.
Um, but frequently it’s an internal solution.
And I think the first thing that’s helpful is to just reconnect with who
are you, why are you doing what you’re doing?
and does it still bring you joy and fulfillment?
And once you can answer those questions,
then it’s easier to make changes.
And sometimes the changes really are big,
like blow up your life kind of,
I need to make a huge change because this isn’t working for me.
But many other times at small, small things
that we don’t even recognize it will make a big difference.
JANNINE: I can see that, I can see that.
Now, one of the things that I’m looking at
is in may resonate with some folks who are listening,
you know, we may be starting a new career or we may be in school and learning things.
And maybe we’re going for a master’s, maybe we’re going for a master’s, you know,
whatever it may be.
I found that when I was in naturopath school, there was still a level of like,
I want to blow up my life kind of situation there and definitely looking at the why,
right? Now, how can folks, you know, in those beginner stages, let’s say,
let’s say, haven’t got to the career you’re in the studying phase, what are some
of the things folks in that range can look at, you know, in addition to the why, but also
what are some other little tweaks that we could do when we’re in that learning phase or or
haven’t fully got to the career phase yet?
DR. BEN: Yep. You know, I think a first step is to
focus on the things they’re not actually teaching you. So when you’re in training, you are learning
the knowledge, the skills that you need to to to practice your trade, whatever that may be.
And that is so overwhelming, but all of your identity goes into becoming that one thing, right?
And you sometimes lose the sight that you’re a whole person that had all of these other
outside interests that are being neglected because you’re trying to become, you know,
achieve this amazing incredible goal that you’ve wanted to achieve for a long time.
And so sometimes it’s reconnecting with the things outside of that one little piece of your
identity that you’ve been focusing on. So if you’re an artist, start painting again, or playing music,
or take your dog for a walk. I mean, reconnect with who you are. You’re not just what you do.
JANNINE: That is so incredible. Also, again, where were you? Where were you like 17 years ago?
And here’s the backstory, guys. I want to share this because I think it’s important to hear this.
I moved and specifically went to Bastia in Seattle because I like water. I wanted to,
I moved there because I wanted to sail.
I never sailed.
I literally just started sailing August of this year, 17 years later.
DR. BEN: Oh, that’s incredible.
JANNINE: That same concept, you know, I wanted to do this.
I wanted never did it, put it off.
So what this leads me into is the leaning into your character strengths,
leaning into your core values.
I’ve just learned about the Clifton strengths.
I don’t know if you dive into those with anybody in terms of strengths based coaching or the
VIA the values training I just did that and I was like why did I not do this like
I don’t know high school so tell us about leaning into strengths values you know the why the
tell us more about that because it’s definitely been let’s say very helpful for me to go back
to sailing and be like, I did want to do this and I’m having great time.
DR. BEN: Yeah, I love that story and I’m so glad to share it because I think it resonates with people.
I think it really goes back to, again, I’ll just kind of focus on developing a skill in medicine.
So a surgeon develops this amazing technical skill to perform a surgery.
And they spend so much time learning how to do the surgery that they think their skill of
of performing the surgery is an innate part of their being, right?
But really, what’s important is what were the pieces of themselves that allowed them
to learn that skill?
So was it curiosity?
Was it persistence?
Was it hard work?
Was it the pursuit of excellence?
So there are all these innate strengths that you brought up, whether it’s the via or the
Clifton strengths, that we rely upon to be the people that we are.
And when we start neglecting those and focusing on the things that we do rather than who we
we are, you know, it just puts us at risk for, for being pretty miserable sometimes.
JANNINE: It’s, it seems so simple, right?
It seems so simple, but we get caught up.
We get caught up.
Do you think as humans, it’s all about, you know, one wanting to keep the job, wanting
to, you know, learn more, wanting that drive in us to just keep pushing more?
What is it about us that we forget who we are?
What happens?
DR. BEN: That’s a great question and if I knew the answer,
I would share it with you.
I mean, but we are definitely wired
to focus on performance, I think.
So, or thinking about the destination
rather than the journey.
And it really takes a surprising amount of effort
to change that mindset.
JANNINE: It’s true.
We are that and I think, you know,
of course, we go to Vegas nerve, right?
And we go to fight or flight
and we’re all trying to protect ourselves from harm
and a lot of the times the harm is imaginary
as you’ve probably seen.
In your case, with performance and working on,
I mean, cardiac pediatricians, this is a big deal, right?
We’ve got little hearts, little bodies, lots to learn.
When you were working on performance drive things
so that you should, what are some of the things,
I saw on your Instagram the lies I’ve told myself,
and I laugh because I’m like, oh God, there’s so many.
But the things we tell yourself,
just one, you know, I really need this, this extra certificate.
I really need to do this training.
Give us, give us a little background on, on the things that drove you in
performance to just keep going to the point where finally you had to,
had to be like, I’m not okay.
DR. BEN: Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I, you know, I don’t, I’m not exactly sure what it was, what it is about me,
but I definitely have always been someone who’s just driven to, to do the
best or be the best.
And there was probably a lot of out external messaging, that kind of, that kind of, you
know, shaped that part of my being.
But I think two things have helped me along the way.
So one is the ability to say, you know what, I don’t know.
Or I’m at the limit of what I know, or I’m at, or we’re at the limit of what we know
in the field and being able to say that to myself, being able to say that to patients,
being able to say that to my colleagues is just having the power to say, I don’t know,
but let’s figure it out.
let’s use the information that we have to make the best decision possible.
And that’s pretty frame, actually, to be able to just admit that, you know what,
I don’t know something and I actually don’t have to know something,
but I just have to create a path forward, but I may not have to have the exact right answer.
JANNINE: Yeah, yeah. No, I think the I don’t know is to drive us. I think the strengths,
you know, when I did the Clifton strengths analysis, I kind of looked at it and was like,
Okay, I can see where part of this could go negative instead of positive.
We’re like, my top five strengths, one of them was learner.
Another one was acheiver.
And I’m like, well, we can see where this could go from.
You know?
DR. BEN: Right?
Yeah.
JANNINE: Did you do you do your Clifton strength?
Do you know yours in terms of– [Advertisement] Hey, how chunky is time for a little break here.
Wanted to tell you about Ben’s programs.
Dr. Ben has programs for pre-med students, med students, and/or physicians.
Now, here’s the thing.
I asked him about and I was like, well, what if someone is a nurse?
What if someone is in the medical field?
He said, definitely these programs could apply.
So I wanted to share with you, you know, just in the event that maybe this
resonates with you, you can be a naturopathic doctor and acupuncturist.
These can resonate with you, but also if you know somebody or you know somebody
your family that really could benefit from this information. Think about medical students,
folks who want to be doctors. Wouldn’t this be a great way for them to really be all in
on themselves to be able to care for folks without causing harm to their own health?
I wish I had this stuff when I was starting out at school 17 plus years ago. So nevertheless,
Nevertheless, Dr. Ben is offered 30% off of his courses with the code health fix 30.
So if you know someone or you yourself may need a little help, check out Dr. Ben’s courses.
It’s good stuff there and something that definitely could save you in the career if
you’re dabbling on thinking about quitting.
And if you know someone or maybe your own doctor is really struggling, it doesn’t hurt
to give him a little hint to say.
All right, let’s get back to the podcast.
DR. BEN: Yeah, I did the VIA strength, so very similar thing.
And one of my top strengths was persistence, which exactly
like you said, that can you can overuse a strength
and that can turn into a negative thing.
And for me, what helped me in that specific scenario
was one of my other strengths was just
the appreciation of excellence and beauty.
And so one thing that I then focused on was at my coach
at the time told me, you know what,
why don’t you use this strength a little bit
on your walk into work and just look for one thing
that you think is beautiful on the walk into work.
And it sounds so cheesy, but it worked.
It changed my mindset walking into work
and I was focused on this amazing thing that I saw
and not like walking into the corn maze
like we talked about earlier.
JANNINE: You know, I think that’s such, I also had the excellence in beauty.
And I like that one.
I kind of was confused as like, how do I use this one?
But that makes sense, finding beauty.
And I think a lot of people will say, oh, well, I live somewhere boring.
I’m like, come on, there’s beauty everywhere.
You just got to look for it.
DR. BEN: Yeah.
I mean, I’m in Iowa, right?
We don’t have a coastal mountain.
So– JANNEINE: You know, and a lot of people would think the Midwest is super heck.
Like just boring is all get out, right?
But corn, corn, the rose, I’m looking outside because I’m currently in Wisconsin right now
because I spent half my time in Wisconsin. And I’m looking outside, they just cut the corn.
I’m missing it. I like how the rose look. I think I like how it’s ways. So, you know,
I guess prop for the Midwest guys. It’s not, there’s beauty everywhere.
There’s not anywhere.
DR. BEN: Yes.
Yes.
JANNINE: Now, one of the things back to the lies I’ve told myself, you know, you had an Instagram
post and guys, I’m going to kind of try to quote it as best as I can. But it was like,
I’m not a good doctor because I called in sick.
Now this is something a lot of people are afraid to take sick time.
They’re afraid they’re going to be judged for it.
They’re, you know, there’s, there’s so many things and there’s also the people need me.
And one of the biggest things that happened in my mind over the whole course
in my career is I cannot call in sick and I, and I felt guilty telling people I was taking
vacation.
I literally felt like I was letting them down.
Did you have this experience?
DR. BEN: Absolutely. I mean, I’m embarrassed to say that I have like 500 hours of banked vacation time,
right? Because I just don’t, I don’t use it as much as I should. And yeah, it’s hard. It’s a
struggle to prioritize, prioritize yourself. And I think in healthcare, whether you’re
self-employed or whether you’re employed by a hospital system or university,
There’s also a little bit of pushback when you take vacation because then or take time away because you come back and none of that work is usually covered.
And so you come back and you almost pay for being on and so learning how to to deal with that.
It is is a skill that honestly I’m still working on.
JANNINE: I’m I’m so glad to hear you say that I really am because I I’m the same there there isn’t a great system.
in the medical field for if you do leave your,
it’s got your emails are gonna build up.
And I think for a lot of people,
that’s true in any career, really,
the emails are gonna build up.
No matter if you put a responder on there,
they’re still gonna show up.
And then there’s the different labs are gonna come in,
people’s imaging it, reports are gonna come in,
it’s all gonna be there.
And at the end of vacation,
has this ever happened to you
where you start to get anxious?
DR. BEN: Oh, yeah. Yeah. The last two days of vacation aren’t great sometimes, right?
Because you just know what you’re going to walk back into.
And so my solution for that is I just take longer vacation.
So I have seven really great days rather than five great days and two bad days, you know what I mean?
JANNINE: That’s a great, I mean, that’s thinking of it that way is amazing.
Because I think I actually started doing this, making sure that I had like a day or two before I went back
because I could adjust.
But I think a lot of people don’t think about that,
because they’ll like literally fly in that night
and back to work the next day.
And maybe we need to be thinking about the buffer zone.
DR. BEN: I love that.
Yes, absolutely a buffer zone is so important
so that you can have your time away and truly be away
and not worry about what’s gonna happen when you come back.
A ramp up and a ramp down kind of thing.
JANNINE: I like that because I mean, honestly,
and maybe this has happened to you too with vacations.
I mean, I’ve been in two to three days
before I can actually relax.
I feel I’m still thinking like,
“Did I check off on that lab?
Did I send that patient that message?
Did this happen?
Is that kind of how your brain works too?”
DR. BEN: Absolutely.
It’s so hard to let go of the to-do list.
And so it takes a while to wind down.
JANNINE: I think a lot of people can resonate with this.
You guys don’t have to be doctors
to have these kinds of things and have the scaries.
I mean, the scaries even for a lot of people
happen on Sundays if they have the weekend off. Now,
for a lot of medical providers, some folks, especially if you are in the
hospital system, you’re working on the weekend. Now,
when your particular practice, do you work on the weekends or are you off on
weekends?
DR. BEN: It depends on the week. So I’ll have weeks where I,
I’m just Monday through Friday and other weeks where I’m on, uh,
seven days in a row. Yeah.
JANNINE: Okay. Okay.
And this is something that I wanted to bring up because there’s a lot of
nurses that listen to my podcast and they’ll be working schedules like that.
as well. And they’ll find that day before the seven day stretch that there starts to
be a little more anxiousness, a little bit more thought process coming into and going,
I’ve got to do this again. Do that again. Do that again. Do that. What kind of, what kind
of things have helped you in that? I’m going to call it Sunday scariest, but it could be
the pre work day scariest whenever it shows up. What kind of things have you employed
to help folks out?
DR. BEN: Yeah. You know, we, um, I think we’ve developed
just some traditions as a family that try to just make Sunday special.
So we’re focused on sort of those traditions rather than what’s coming on Monday.
And so one thing we do is we just have Sunday supper and whoever’s around,
we have some extended family in the area.
And so whoever’s around comes over and we just hang out and have dinner,
break bread, so to speak.
And I think that that’s really worked for me because then that becomes a focus
of Sunday and not what’s going to happen on Monday.
I think when I go to bed, you know, I still probably think about work,
but my mind, mine’s that’s so different.
just because we have that ritual on Sunday.
JANNINE: That’s huge.
I mean, that used to be a tradition for years and years.
A lot of people would do this Sunday.
It’s suppers and I think we should bring it back.
I like that.
I like that.
DR. BEN: Absolutely.
JANNINE: Cool.
I might have to figure that out over here and do some things like that.
Now, another, you know, aspect of lies we tell ourselves is that we can’t take breaks
during the day.
And a lot of folks, I always will tell folks like, Hey, you know, by law, you get
a 15 minute break every four hours and you do get a lunch break.
Like that is by law.
However, it seems in the medical field, if you walk around and look,
you’re going to see people on their computer eating as fast as they possibly
can, shoving food in between patients.
Like I see it all the time.
Um, what are some of your, your, your things there in terms of creating boundaries?
And we’ll talk about boundaries in a little bit here around breaks and,
and working on that kind of stuff.
DR. BEN: Yeah.
Yeah, I’m a big fan of eating lunch away from your desk.
I, again, I struggle to do that sometimes, but even if it’s just 15 minutes,
especially this time of year when it’s, you know, beautiful outside for most
people, like getting outside and getting some sunshine and just, you know,
eating your lunch outside is a great, a great thing to do.
It’s also a great way to build camaraderie.
So I’m fortunate that I have several colleagues that I work with, you know.
So I’m able to grab someone and be like, Hey, let’s just go grab a cup of coffee
and take a few minutes and just connect over the football game coming up or what
whatever it is that we’re excited about.
JANNINE: That’s right, you are a Hawkeye fan, is what I thought.
DR. BEN: I’m a Hawkeye fan, that’s right, yeah.
JANNINE: There you go, there you go.
I mean, you guys could talk about the Ohio State,
you could talk about, you know, Michigan,
you got a lot of folks in that department,
you guys could be talking about, good to deal it.
And some rivalries, maybe if you’ve got some folks
from other states, so, you know,
falls a good time of year, I think,
to take breaks and talk about, yeah, football,
talk about, you know, whatever else interests pumpkins.
I don’t know.
DR. BEN: Pumpkins, yeah.
Yeah.
JANNINE: Pumpkin pack.
DR. BEN: Trick or treating, yeah.
kids are picking out their Halloween costumes, right?
So
JANNINE: Right.
Right.
We got lots of things to talk about.
So I, you know, and I think a lot of people are genuinely curious about who’s
doing what.
And so one of the things I like to bring up is like talk with people versus
scroll on Instagram or Facebook to see what they’re doing.
DR. BEN: Yeah.
Put your phone down on almost 15 minute breaks.
Yeah.
JANNINE: Right. Right.
So, you know, really, we’ve talked about a lot of like the main things that
happen with folks, but one of the bigger things, you know, back to is it
hormones or is it burnout? I think for a lot of people, we think about burnout as being like the end point where we’re about to blow up our life and we are literally at our
what’s end, whether it’s fatigue, whether it’s anxiety, whether there’s, you know, some sort of mental health kind of disturbance going on, whatever it may be. What are some of the other subtle signs?
just to give folks a little clue of what are some of the other subtle signs where maybe we’re not
ready to blow our life up, but we’re starting to head towards burnout. What may be some things
that we could look for, we could identify, and kind of pull it away a little bit from being hormones
versus burnout.
DR. BEN: Yeah, yeah. So I think, you know, just putting it into buckets, there’s like the
physical, emotional, and sort of spiritual bucket. So physically, I mentioned like one of my
difficulties was sleeping. So I think change in sleep habits is a big one. Change in appetite.
And what I’ve encountered, which is interesting is people have the interest to do things still,
unlike, you know, some other other conditions like depression where the interest has gone.
People have the interest to do something, but they don’t have the energy to. So you go home
and you think, oh, I really actually really want to go to a run, but I just can’t. I’m exhausted.
I think emotionally, it’s probably varies from person to person, but I would say if you’re a
little bit shorter than you used to be and you notice that people maybe are avoiding asking you
questions is one. And maybe just a little bit of feeling anxious or feeling down. So, kind of just
a change in your mood. And spiritually, I would say it’s just that sense of, I just kind of don’t
care, you know, and whatever your belief system is or whatever it is that’s important to you,
you just kind of notice that I just don’t care that much right now.
JANNINE: I think the I don’t care is really important to touch on because it showed up in my world where
I love cooking. I was a super foodie. I at one point had a website called recipe whisper back.
way in the early days of the internet and things.
And oddly enough, I stopped cooking.
I just was like, I don’t care what I eat anymore.
In fact, the appetite change, I didn’t even care to eat.
I would not eat all day partially because I was like,
well, I don’t have time to eat during the damn too busy.
So I’m just not going to.
And then it would turn into get home
and like Mama Bear tears apart the house, right?
DR. BEN: Right, right, right, yeah.
– Yeah.
JANNINE: So, I mean, these are just little things guys.
I wanna put out there things that I’ve experienced
and Ben’s laughing,
’cause I’m sure he’s seen that with folks
or maybe himself in that case.
But it’s a really big one, I think,
for a lot of folks to notice in terms of that,
I don’t care, like, I don’t care what we eat.
I don’t care where we go for dinner.
I don’t really, like, decision fatigue maybe
is another man’s decision.
DR. BEN: That’s exactly a great way to phrase it.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
JANNINE: Yeah, it’s wild.
So guys, it’s something to kind of differentiate
because I feel like hormones have a little bit more
of a spice to it.
Whereas this is more like situational,
like you can tie it in,
but you can also see the fatigue of like decision fatigue,
life fatigue, physical fatigue is where kind of,
I would see things I’d get home.
Yeah, after I like pillage the kitchen, I would crash.
And then wondered why I gained a bunch of weight.
DR. BEN: Right, right, yeah.
JANNINE: This, this is, yeah, this is what’s happening.
Now, one of the things I mentioned before we hit record
was looking at how doctors are somewhat treated.
And guys, I am gonna go on a little bit,
I’m not gonna call it a rant,
I’m gonna say it’s a public service announcement
for how you treat your doctors.
One of the big things I had mentioned too, Ben,
was that sometimes folks will call me multiple times
’cause their prescription didn’t go through.
And, you know, I explained that I did my job, I swear.
I mean, I have gone to the point,
but I will, I won’t lie that sometimes I’ve gone
to the point where I screenshot my EHR system
showing people that it’s been put in.
Because it’s one of those things that in the system,
sometimes things work a little slower right now,
whether it’s referrals, what it not.
And it, it’s one of those things where, yes,
I may be more sensitive ’cause I’m still coming out
of burnout phase. And you can speak to that because sometimes we can blow
other things off. But it’s also here is where we’re at boundaries. And I
think for a lot of people with burnout, we we’ve lost some of our
boundaries. We’ve stepped over some of our boundaries. And this is
where another thing that I think is really important to talk about
because having someone have so much access to you. Yes, my my
particular practice is that way because I’m solo. But at the same
time setting boundaries because I probably wouldn’t be annoyed by this if I had better
boundaries around these things. So share the boundaries situation and going down that
route.
DR. BEN: Yeah. So I guess I’ll have a couple thoughts. So the first one is just sort of a recommendation
for people and health care is hard for patients. I mean, our health care system, no matter
what your role is, is a little bit dysfunctional. And that’s very true on the patient side,
it’s also true on the provider side. And physicians, nurses, therapists are really employees in the
system. Even if you’re even if you’re self-employed, you’re still really just a cog in a big system.
And the amount of control that you have over what happens is really small. But because we’re in a
position of decision making, it seems like we have control over everything, but really we don’t.
And so one thing that I love, a good tactic for patients,
if they are frustrated and they just need something
accomplished, is to start with a question and say,
hey, where’s my prescription at?
Or hey, how can I get this appointment scheduled?
Rather than I need my prescription right now,
or I need this appointment right now.
So I think starting with a question
is just really helpful because it sets an amicable tone
for everyone.
So that would be my advice for when
you need something from a provider,
just start with a question that’s really helpful.
On the provider side, boundaries are hard.
I mean, it’s really hard because we went into this field to help people and you just want to help them all the time.
And so I think setting expectations.
So one is, you know, when people get an email, you having an automatic reply that says,
I will respond to your message within 24 or 48 hours.
and if this is urgent, you know, contact the appropriate urgent clinic, right?
And so setting an expectation that, hey, this isn’t going to meet immediate response,
I think is really helpful. Number two is when you’re in a position to be able to turn things off,
whether it’s remove the EMR from your phone or even carry just a personal phone and a professional phone
or something, you know, physically setting boundaries so that that tendency that we all have to just do
five more minutes of work is you have a block there where you can’t just do five
minutes of work.
JANNINE: Oh, so huge. So huge. Can I hear that from folks in all industries? You know,
with the the block blocking off the time and being like, this is when I’m done.
This is the do not disturb. I like the do not disturb thing on the iPhone. It has
helped me immensely to not have that like, yeah, five more minutes. Oh, let me just
deal with this. Oh, let me with like, and you question yourself because you’re like,
I could I deal with it tomorrow.
DR. BEN: Right.
Yeah.
Yeah.
JANNINE: Nine times out of 10.
Yes.
Yes.
And of course in the in the medical field, we do have to have that, you know,
emergency line and at least to call it the bat phone when I used to carry
around two phones before there was a phone forwarding thing.
So so amazing.
Um, phone forwarding, but nevertheless, it is important to think of those
distinctions.
And I like that.
I like that for folks now back to one of the other things that you had on
Instagram that I absolutely loved was the guilt-free choices to prioritize your
well-being because being an empathetic person, I think a lot of people are, a lot
of people have empathy for others, what they don’t even have to be in the
the medical field. I think there’s a lot of this like how do I prioritize
myself? What are some of the guilt-free choices that you’ve used and and
recommended to your folks to choose in looking at self-care and things of that nature.
DR. BEN: Yeah. I think empathy is a great word for that. And so frequently, what I will do for myself and
what I recommend to others is, would you give that advice to a friend? So, you know, if you’re
feeling guilty about taking a vacation and a friend came up to you and asked, “Hey, I’m thinking I’m
I’m going to go on this vacation.
I’m so excited about it.
What would you tell them?
And what are you telling yourself?
And so if your self-talk is very different
than what you would tell someone else,
then reassessing that self-talk is really important.
JANNINE: Yeah, self-talk, ooh, it’s impossible.
We’ll tell others to do, but we can’t seem to take
that advice for ourselves.
And especially, I don’t know how it is for men,
but for women, we can’t seem to take our own advice.
It is–
DR. BEN: Yeah.
Probably it’s, there are different struggles,
but I think that is universal probably, right?
(laughs)
JANNINE: Absolutely, absolutely.
Now let’s talk about your website a little bit
and your programs and how you’re helping folks.
So the developing doctor, I’m gonna pull up the website.
So I have it here on the front so you guys
will see me kind of looking off to the side.
But you’ve got courses for pre-med, medical students,
training, physician, I mean, you’ve covered all your bases
in the medical field.
Give us a little scoop about what you were thinking
and creating all of them.
And did you do surveys
or were you working off of your own personal experience?
DR. BEN: Yeah, it was largely based off of my own personal experience.
So my experience going through the medical system
and then I’ve always worked in academic medicine.
And so in that role, I’ve helped with,
promotions advisory, kind of onboarding students,
mentoring, coaching students.
And so from those interactions,
I just recognize that there’s a whole skill set
that we are lacking when we leave medical training
that’s really necessary to function
in the healthcare system in a way that’s healthy.
And so finding a way to kind of develop those skills
is what the goal of my coaching,
what my courses are,
so things like communication, emotional intelligence,
leadership, self-care, recognizing your values.
So a lot of the things that we’ve talked about
are things that we really focus on.
JANNINE: It’s interesting to hear you say emotional intelligence.
You know, it’s one of those things that I haven’t really
heard about and learned about until the last couple of years.
And I know it wasn’t in my, my training.
And people will think last year, you know, we would have done all these different
things. And then the truth is, is as I think that
Bastyr was trying so hard to, to keep us very close to the medical school
training, a lot of people don’t think that.
But the truth is, is I think they were trying so hard that they over
compensated in the medical school training and didn’t give us as much of
the heart center training that I would have probably benefited from,
especially this emotional intelligence,
because I didn’t have anyone coming in telling me to process my emotions,
how to think about our emotions.
Explain how you’re working with folks and teaching emotional intelligence to
the medical field or providers and things of that nature.
DR. BEN: Yeah.
I think the thing that surprises me is that we have difficulties identifying
your own emotions.
And that’s really the base of emotional intelligence.
So sometimes it’s something just as simple as naming what you’re feeling.
Trying to do that without judgment is hard, um, but sort of naming what you’re
feeling. And that’s just a great place to start.
And if you notice that you’re, the emotions that you’re feeling are limited to two
or three, then that’s probably a place to work, right?
Because we all have more emotions than angry, happy, sad.
And so, um, if you’re feeling angry, are you really angry or are you anxious?
Or, you know, what is it that you’re really feeling that’s making you feel
tense that makes you think you’re angry. And so working on that skill is really the first
step that I encourage people to focus on.
JANNINE: I like that. Yeah, I think for many of us, I’m like, where’s this training in grade school?
You know, where’s this training in like preschool? Like all of these things I’ve learned in
the last, you know, I will say since I will admit that since I went through my own burnout
just around COVID, I mean, I think it was all of these things to my mind. I’m like, why
“Are we not teaching this to preschoolers
so that they can process emotions better
and not end up with some of the things
that’s adults or little quirks we have?”
DR. BEN: Yeah, yeah.
And I think so much of our training and healthcare
and I think other fields is focused on the client,
so the patient.
And so we learn how to communicate with the patient
and we learn how to deal with their emotions,
but we don’t really learn how to communicate
with our colleagues or with our coworkers
and we don’t learn how to communicate with ourselves.
And so that’s really what, what I think is at the core of emotional intelligence.
Yeah.
JANNINE: Absolutely.
I mean, self communication first and foremost.
And I think also just losing a little bit of an, and this is kind of maybe
something that maybe you talk about in your courses is this, this facade that
ever, that we are okay, everything’s okay.
And we’re strong if we don’t have these symptoms and, and, you know,
trying to be strong with your coworkers.
Like, I’m fine.
Everything’s fine.
I’m, I’m tough.
I got this.
It’s I found that when I worked in a in a clinic, um, medical setting where I was
the naturopath and there was medical doctors I was working with and other
different providers.
And I felt like on days where, you know, you were just like, I have to suck it up
but your cup, you know, like don’t let them see you cry.
Like, not good, you know, but, but it does feel like that is still to some point, um,
in the field where we do feel like we’ve got to have like that protective barrier.
What are you recommending with folks to work on that and really work on communication with
fellow coworkers when you’re just like, I got to tell somebody I’m not doing all right?
DR. BEN: Yeah.
It’s hard, right? Learning those skills is hard. But I think, again, starting with the question
and if it was, let’s say, just say it was a difficult interaction.
Rather than assuming that you know what the other person was feeling and what they were thinking during the interaction,
just start with the question and say, “Hey, I felt really uncomfortable about our last conversation.
How did you feel?”
And so opening up the door to just talk about feelings as well as the facts of the situation,
but just opening up the door with a question and asking how other people feel is a great place to start.
JANNINE: Sounds like questions are the way to go here.
Ask your doc a question versus demand.
I don’t know.
And ask a question with coworkers.
It’s so, it’s so important.
I think it takes down the level of intensity.
Let’s put it that way versus a statement.
The question definitely brings in the empathy too.
I like that.
Good stuff, good stuff.
Man, Dr. Ben, I wish you were around 17 years ago with us
to get me on the right foot in my practice,
But nevertheless, you’re here for all of us now.
And I mean, I looked through the website extensively
and was just loving it.
I’m like, wow, this is great.
I feel like this should be a foundational program
for anyone that’s in the medical field.
Now, of course, I’m going to ask you the question.
I know it’s geared towards physicians.
Do you take nurses?
Do you take massage therapists, acupunctureists,
naturopaths?
DR. BEN: Absolutely.
I mean, really, I speak about physician
because that’s my lived experience.
And so it’s hard for me to talk about others, you know,
experiences in a way that feels genuine,
but the pain points are really similar
for everyone in healthcare and honestly,
probably for anyone in the service industry
where we’re helping others.
And so I’m happy to talk to anybody
that’s experiencing burnout and see if I can help.
And if I’m not the right person,
I know plenty of people that I can point them to
that would be able to help them out.
JANNINE: That’s awesome.
All right.
So let’s tell folks where they can find you online.
Of course, it’s thedevelopingdoctor.com,
but what about Instagram, LinkedIn, those guys,
what are your handles there so folks can find you?
DR. BEN: Yeah, so all of them are developingdoctor
or you can just look me up Ben Reinking.
I’ve got personal and professional pages
and the content is very similar in all of them.
Yeah, and I’d love to connect with people.
JANNINE: Awesome, I love it and you’re still practicing.
DR. BEN: Correct, I’m a full-time physician
so I work full-time in pediatric cardiology
and then I have this coaching business
was just kind of grew out of my personal experience
and is now something that is really fun for me to do.
JANNINE: That’s awesome.
I mean, there’s not, I mean, your specialty is unique
with pediatric cardiology and if folks are in Iowa,
are we Ames, Iowa?
Where?
DR. BEN: Iowa City, Iowa City.
JANNINE: Okay, okay.
‘Cause I’m like, I don’t remember where the Hawkeyes are.
DR. BEN: University of Iowa.
JANNINE: There we go.
There you go, guys.
I’m embarrassed that I couldn’t get that one out.
I should know better.
grew up in the Midwest. So, nevertheless, if you’re looking for a pediatric cardiologist as well,
we’ve got a great one here. But nevertheless, man, Dr. Ben, thank you for what you’re doing.
This is awesome. I’m definitely going to be sharing this with all my doctor pals because
let’s face it, but it’s not real. It’s definitely impacting a lot of folks and
we got to do something about it. Got to share the spread the word. Thank you for coming on.
DR. BEN: Thank you so much. This has been a great conversation and I learned a lot from your
story as well so I appreciate you sharing it.
JANNINE: Oh my pleasure.
[Outro] Hey fellow health junkie. Thanks for listening to The Health Fix Podcast. If you enjoy tuning in,
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