Dr. Y is a rare and exotic species among Docs Who Cut Back: a surgical subspecialist who completed a decade-long course of training in a highly competitive field. More unusual still, she opted to cut back 4 years after working full-time as a subspecialist attending (to be fair, she worked one additional year as a general surgeon prior to entering …
A Portrait Of The Artist As A Young Nerd
Some phone calls are long overdue by the time you make them. Distance learning has echoed evolution in our household by rewarding specialization. As a dual-nerd couple, my wife has adopted the more time-consuming math supplementation while I have offered to help teach science and social studies. Discussing the classification of species with my 13 year old recently, I caught …
Docs Who Cut Back: Where Are They Now?
I enjoyed many guilty pleasures in my TV gorging teen years, but none were so satisfying as tuning into a “Where are they now?” program. Whether it was one hit wonders on VH1 or my favorite child actors from Punky Brewster, Diff’rent Strokes and The Facts of Life, I could not get enough of this silliness. There was the male …
Credit Card Hackers Beware: IRS Deems Reward Dollars Taxable Income
Developing financial literacy, and the pursuit of financial independence, tends to generate extreme enthusiasm among participants. People go big. Folks who stumble across the Mr. Money Mustache blog don’t just take note of MMM’s frugal lifestyle, they tend to judge whether they are following the precepts of Mustachianism, a tongue in cheek term for a cult that is more serious …
Mixing Rigorous Skepticism With Acute Gullibility
We tend to recall our winners disproportionately, a wiring flaw in our human composition. I first became acquainted with this fact when someone dear to me began touting her remarkable track record with matchmaking friends. She liked to entertain friends at social gatherings with the two marriages that had come into being due to her intervention. Much was made by …
Catastrophe And The Reality Distortion Field
Years ago, I read Walter Isaacson’s biography of Steve Jobs. One of the most striking concepts in the book was what one of the top engineers at Apple called the reality distortion field, a Trekkie term co-opted to describe how Jobs made the impossible seem plausible to those in his immediate vicinity and overcame their objections to reach unlikely outcomes. …
Reflecting On A Delightfully Weird 1980s Childhood
COVID seems like such a weird way to spend a childhood…except for all the other ways. Solitary, sure. Antisocial, of course. But weird is a relative term. I was thinking back to the music videos that defined my childhood in the 1980s, and I couldn’t help but be struck by how weird it all seems in retrospect. Take an artist …
Approaching An Old Problem With New Eyes
Iteration, iteration, iteration. You repeat a process with minor tweaks, incorporating what you’ve learned from your successes and failures, until you ultimately arrive at a workable solution. This is a weirdly personal case study, but I thought it adequately described a valuable process. It also demonstrates that the difference between success and failure is persistence. I have a dust problem …
Safe Passage And Road Blocks
It was the early 1980s, and we were eleven years old. She and her identical twin sister had been classmates for several years, teasing presences with ponytails and impish grins. In the novel marinade of hormones that flavored my outlook on absolutely everything, I began to notice her. She was my first crush. Years later I would discover a forgotten …
On Keeping Your Cool With Hot Letters
Yet another lesson gleaned from the Master Class by Doris Kearns Goodwin explored how great leaders dealt with putting aside awkward interpersonal dynamics in the name of pursuing the greater good. Explicitly highlighted was Abraham Lincoln. One example provided was Lincoln’s selection of Edwin Stanton to serve as his Secretary of War. Years earlier, Stanton had humiliated Lincoln. In 1855, …