(no title)
pineal | 3 years ago
A common analogy used in neurosurgery training: "Imagine a wooden plank on the driveway and walk its length -- no problem. Suspend that same board ten stories in the air and try again." The hard part is not the "figuring out" or "execution" but knowing the irreversibility and making the correct decision. Your patient expects you to be correct 10 times out of 10, yet you know that's not possible. Squaring our fallibility with the irreversibility of our missteps is the hard part, and what keeps surgeons up at night. The fly struggles in the web.
No comments yet.