Ending Physician Overwhelm
I'm Megan Melo, board-certified Family and Obesity Medicine Physician and Physician Coach. In this podcast we talk about the many ways that burnout shows up in our lives, and what we can do about it. I'm on a mission to help Physicians take steps towards to heal burnout by unlearning the habits of perfectionism, people-pleasing and limiting beliefs so that we can lead healthier, happier lives.
The healthcare system is broken; but you don't have to wait until it's fixed to feel better. I'm here to help.
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Connect with me:
- Website: www.healthierforgood.com
- Instagram: @MeganMeloMD
- Email: megan@healthierforgood.com
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Ending Physician Overwhelm
Stop Waiting to Feel Better
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How many times have you held your own happiness hostage?
“I’ll feel better when my notes are closed.”
“I can rest when the work is done.”
“I’ll finally feel confident when I’m an attending.”
We’ve all done it. We tie positive emotions to achievement and convince ourselves that relief, joy, or rest are rewards we earn later.
But here’s the problem: later keeps moving.
In this episode, we’re talking about the subtle but powerful habit of postponing positive emotions — and why it’s quietly keeping you stuck, even when you’re accomplishing incredible things.
We Were Trained to Live in “When/Then”
Medicine conditions us early:
- I’ll feel smart when I pass this exam.
- I’ll feel competent when residency is over.
- I’ll feel secure when I’m established.
And every time we hit the milestone, there’s a brief lift… then we adapt. Psychologists call this hedonic adaptation — our nervous system returns to baseline after positive changes. The “arrival fallacy” tells us happiness lives in the next achievement. It doesn’t.
If we keep believing we’ll feel better when, we spend our lives postponing joy.
And here’s the kicker: we lose the skill of feeling good in the present.
Three Ways This Shows Up
1️⃣ We Postpone Positive Emotion
You finally close your notes. You go on vacation. Your inbox is covered.
And you still can’t relax.
Why?
Because we’ve practiced vigilance far more than we’ve practiced ease. We know how to be hyper-alert. We don’t always know how to feel delight.
Joy feels foreign. Rest feels suspicious.
So we must relearn how to experience positive emotion now — not as a reward, but as a human capacity.
2️⃣ We Tie Moral Worth to Productivity
This one is dangerous.
Somewhere along the way, we absorbed the idea that:
- If I achieve more, I am more worthy.
- If I’m behind, I’m failing.
- If I’m not exceptional, I’m not enough.
Your moral worth is not determined by whether you finished residency, got promoted, or became famous.
It is determined by your values and how you live them.
You are not more virtuous because you’re productive.
And you are not less worthy because you’re tired.
3️⃣ The Goalpost Always Moves
Medical training is hierarchical by design. Every stage has another “next.”
Intern → senior resident → fellow → attending → faculty → leadership.
If we keep waiting for the next level to allow happiness, we will wait forever.
There is always another win.
So we must learn to uncouple:
“I want to become an attending.”
AND
“I can practice joy and steadiness now.”
Both can be true.
What Changes When We Stop Waiting?
Imagine:
- You enjoy the smell of your baby’s head even while exhausted.
- You feel pride in your work even while growing.
- You take a moment of rest without earning it.
We don’t deny reality. Hard seasons exist.
But we stop tellin
To learn more about my coaching practice and group offerings, head over to www.healthierforgood.com. I help Physicians and Allied Health Professional women to let go of toxic perfectionist and people-pleasing habits that leave them frustrated and exhausted. If you are ready to learn skills that help you set boundaries and prioritize yourself, without becoming a cynical a-hole, come work with me.
Want to contact me directly?
Email: megan@healthierforgood.com
Follow me on Instagram!
@MeganMeloMD