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Life Lessons From a Hospice Doctor: You Have It Completely Backwards
- Aug 1 2024
- Duración: 46 m
- Podcast
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Resumen
Lo que los oyentes dicen sobre Life Lessons From a Hospice Doctor: You Have It Completely Backwards
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- Denise picone
- 10-10-24
Fascinating
This sent home the message: we are perfect and good enough just because we exist- no qualifiers needed
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- TheSaltyNurse
- 08-07-24
Way Misleading Episode Title
Based on the title, I was anticipating a hospice doctor’s insight and advice gleaned over the years from conversations with patients in their last days. Wrong!
Approximately the first 40 minutes is “world-renowned” MD, Zack Bush (Mel tends to play fast and loose with the phrase “world-renowned” when *maybe* 1 in 10 guests actually are) sharing his own “near-death experience,” which, by his own admission, *wasn’t* one, as he was uninjured, followed by Mel discussing how her fears of both death and flying in an airplane up and disappeared out of the blue 6 years ago.
Additionally, Dr. Zack speaks fairly quickly, almost in a mumbly, very low pitched monotone and it’s as if he also speaks in riddles, as much of what he says is vague and arbitrary, leaving the listener to figure out what he means. He offers little, if any, practical advice, nor any life-changing wisdom. In fact, he doesn’t even discuss anything hospice patients have shared with him from their deathbeds. He provides exactly one nugget of info, which he states was gleaned from his own “NDE” which is, we are born whole, we are whole now, and we’ll still be whole at the end. That’s lovely and all, but it’s extremely vague, it’s hardly brand new info, and what are we even supposed to do with that, anyway? He did offer a bit of advice, which was to encourage us not to seek approval from others, only from ourselves (again, lovely, but hardly a novel concept for anyone). He also suggested we go outside, lie down next to a tree, and look up at it til it looks back at us. You’re welcome.
If you are, as I was, looking forward to gaining profound, tangible insight to apply to your own life, or listening to eye-opening/life-changing anecdotes from the good doctor’s conversations with dying individuals, look elsewhere; despite the title, there’s none of that here.
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