Someone asks you what you do, and your knee-jerk reaction is to tell them you’re a doctor. It’s a product of the western lifestyle. We conflate who we are with what we do. For physicians, COVID-19 perhaps has reinforced this tendency. The pandemic reminds you that you’re a doctor, all day every day. This is why — perhaps now more than ever — physicians need a sound work-life balance. Habit creation is a proven way to modify behavior. These clinically proven habits will improve your work-life balance and make you a more effective doctor and human being. Journaling Putting your mind on paper helps identify thought patterns and nullify anxiety. A 2018 JMIR Mental Health study showed that web-based journaling prompts that asked patients to reflect on trauma “decreased mental distress and increased well-being relative to baseline.” Particularly when done first thing in the morning — before reading the news or checking social media — a short journaling session is a useful way to capture whatever your subconscious mind might have been processing while you slept. Think of August Kekulé, the 19th century German organic chemist who identified the shape of benzene molecules after seeing it as an abstraction in a dream. Journaling may help you solve a clinical conundrum that you’re wrestling with, or identify a series of important personal questions that you’re ruminating over. Barring either of those, it may help keep everyday stress in check. Mindfulness Mindfulness can be as organized and traditional or as freewheeling as you want. For example, traditional Zen-style meditation requires you to be seated, eyes open, and focusing on your breathing. Less orthodox approaches to mindfulness, including apps such as Headspace, Waking Up and Calm, allow you to take more liberties with how you’re seated and ocular status. A pilot study published this year in JMIR Mental Health shows that app-based mediation may be an effective way of reducing generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) symptoms in physicians — a driver of burnout. Thirty-four U.S.-based doctors who self-reported GAD symptoms used a meditation app. After 1 month, they reported a 48% reduction in GAD score and after 3 months, a 57% reduction. Regardless of how you approach a mindfulness practice, it will make you more attentive and less emotionally reactive. This will serve you in your practice, perhaps making you more attuned to the physical and emotional states of your patients. And, your friends and family will benefit from your increased empathy as well. Physical practice Mindfulness is great, but you can’t be in your head all the time. Well, you can, but it certainly has some health consequences. CVD, depression and anxiety, as well as orthopedic health consequences, to name a few. The human body was meant to move. A physical practice will energize you and give you the endurance to make it through a day on your feet, and it will give you a stress-busting outlet. To make it into a habit, it needs to be something you enjoy doing, though. Many make the mistake of taking up a physical practice, such as running, only to discover that they hate it. You have options. Your physical practice could be something as conventional as lifting weights, or it could be a spiritual/physical hybrid, such as yoga. For example, a 2019 literature review published in Brain Plasticity found that yoga improves the structure and/or function of the prefrontal cortex, hippocampus, amygdala, cingulate cortex, and the default mode network. Yoga may also stave off age-related mental declines, the researchers wrote. Or, you might pick something that incorporates all three, such as a martial art. For example, a 2019 pilot study published in Military Medicine demonstrated that veterans with PTSD symptoms benefited from 5 months of training in Brazilian Jiu Jitsu, a grappling martial art. “Study participants demonstrated clinically meaningful improvements in their PTSD symptoms as well as decreased symptoms of major depressive disorder, generalized anxiety and decreased alcohol use; effect sizes varied from 0.80 to 1.85,” researchers wrote. Internet sabbath Having a vast information network at your fingertips has made medicine easier, but it’s also made the career more intrusive and eroded separation between work life and home life. Furthermore, social media has put a neurochemical slot machine in all of our pockets, nagging many of us to reach for a quick dopamine hit at the slightest indication of boredom or anxiety. An internet sabbath may help manage your tech habit. Once a week, pick a period between sun up and sun down when you’re going to live like it’s 1999. Pretend the device in your pocket doesn’t have an internet connection. Use the time you’d be mindlessly scrolling to read a book, connect with your family, or contemplate the nature of a tree. Seriously. Check out trees. They’re awesome. Final thoughts Habits don’t become habits until we perform them habitually, meaning without thinking about it. Habit formation takes time and repetition, which are less likely to happen if you aren’t motivated to create the habit in the first place. When selecting a habit that will make you a better physician and person, choose one that you’ll enjoy developing to increase your likelihood of success. TL;DR These habits will make you a better physician and doctor: Journaling: Start your day with putting your thoughts on paper. You may gain some clinical insights or clarity, and you’ll minimize feelings of stress and anxiety. Mindfulness: Go the more traditional Zen route, or use a modern app-based approach. Your ability to focus will expand, and you’ll be more present when with friends and family. Physical practice: This can be a conventional practice, such as lifting weights or running, or something more artistic and/or spiritual, such as yoga or a martial art. You’ll build your body and clear your mind at the same time. Internet sabbath: Schedule a weekly break from the internet where your smartphone becomes the brick you lugged around in the late ‘90s. You’ll clear your head and tune in more to the present moment. Source