Rest In Medicine: why its complicated
Rest in medicine is complicated — and if you're a doctor who struggles to switch off, you're not alone. In this article, I explore why rest and recovery can feel so difficult for those working in medicine, and why doctor wellbeing goes so much deeper than just logging fewer hours. Drawing on almost 20 years in the NHS and my work coaching doctors, I also share details of a retreat for doctors designed around the seven types of rest — a gentle space to begin doing things differently.
The Hidden Struggle: How Anxiety and Shame Shape Doctors’ Lives
It can begin in small, invisible ways.
A flutter in the chest before ward rounds. A tightness in the throat before speaking up in meetings, the waves of nausea preparing to speak to a concerned relative.
The quiet dread of not knowing, not being enough, not having the answer, not being able to hold it all.
For years, anxiety lived in my body like a quiet, constant alarm. I would feel it rise, an inner fluttering, a heat in my chest. I could feel the blush before it came. And I feared it. Not just the sensation, but what it would mean. What others would see. That they would notice and judge me.
And then comes the shame.
Because doctors, we tell ourselves, aren’t meant to feel this way. We’re trained to be steady, competent, unshakable. We learn to allay fear in others, but not in ourselves. And when anxiety shows up, it feels like a betrayal. A crack in the armour we’ve worked so hard to wear.