Explorez tous les épisodes du podcast The Second Shift
| Titre | Date | Durée | |
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| "When the Doctor Becomes the Patient" | 08 Apr 2026 | 01:08:37 | |
Episode Overview Dr. Peter Crane is a rural family physician in Idaho, host of Doctors Making a Difference, and a cancer survivor still actively practicing medicine while undergoing treatment. In this conversation, he reflects on the unusual path that brought him back to his hometown to replace the physician who delivered him, the unique demands and rewards of rural medicine, and what it means to care for a community where your patients are also your neighbors, friends, and fellow parents. The conversation takes a deeper turn as Peter shares the story of discovering a 26-centimeter sarcoma and navigating life as both physician and patient. He talks candidly about continuing to work through radiation and treatment, the support he received from colleagues who stepped in when he could not, and how his diagnosis sharpened his perspective on time, family, burnout, and purpose. Throughout the episode, Peter offers a thoughtful defense of medicine as a calling worth protecting, even in a system that often seems built to drain joy from the people inside it. This is a conversation about service, identity, resilience, and the difference between making a living and making a life. What We Cover
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| "Too Dumb to Quit" | 25 Mar 2026 | 01:05:01 | |
John Shufeldt School of Medicine and Medical Engineering: https://medicine.asu.edu/ Dr. John Shufeldt - ER doc, serial entrepreneur, and namesake of ASU's new medical school - talks about building companies while never leaving the exam room. From selling a helicopter to make payroll to discovering a patient's CPAP was useless without electricity, John traces a career defined by stacking identities rather than trading them. The conversation moves from startup mechanics into harder territory: healthcare disparity on tribal lands, the system's betrayal of its own physicians, and why he chose "kind" as his legacy over everything else on his CV. Deep TakeawaysThe "And" Is the Strategy. John credits his longevity to never being only a physician. The second identity - entrepreneur, student, investor - wasn't a distraction. It was the pressure valve that kept medicine sustainable for 30+ years. Grit Narratives Can Be Misleading. John says "too dumb to quit," but his behavior - pivoting business models, reading markets, evaluating founders with nuance - tells a different story. The hosts catch this in the debrief: the most strategic people often credit persistence because they genuinely believe it mattered more. They might be wrong. Shame, Not Ambition, Built Tribal Health. The electricity story isn't just an anecdote, it's the fracture point. John wasn't driven to tribal medicine by opportunity. He was driven by embarrassment at his own ignorance of conditions he compares to below the third world, inside the United States. The Relational Cost Goes Unexamined. No salary for years, triple-mortgaged house, sleep deprivation. John frames it with humor. But the hosts acknowledge what the interview didn't reach: it would be rare to sustain this pace without significant personal sacrifice that never made the highlight reel. Kindness as Radical Legacy. Asked how he wants to be remembered, John skips the résumé and says "kind." The unresolved tension: can relentless ambition and consistent kindness coexist, or does one inevitably erode the other? Chapters
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| "Staying Relevant After You Hang Up the Coat" | 03 Mar 2026 | 01:01:57 | |
For ACEP members interested in Exploring Retirement, Log into www.ACEP.org Http://engaged.acep.org/main/groups/137305/lounge (to get to the engaged member platform) For more about us: In this episode of the Second Shift podcast, hosts Bryan Jepson and Aaron Milledge welcome Dr. Stephen Anderson, a retired emergency medicine physician, to discuss his extensive career, community advocacy, and the transition to retirement. Dr. Anderson shares insights on the importance of staying relevant after retirement, the impact of personal tragedy on advocacy work, and the significance of prioritizing family and personal fulfillment. The conversation also touches on the Naloxone Project, financial planning for retirement, and the challenges of burnout in the medical profession. Takeaways
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| "Never Get Into a Fair Fight" | 03 Mar 2026 | 00:53:01 | |
In this episode of the Second Shift podcast, hosts Bryan Jepsen and Aaron Milledge delve into the concept of transitioning from high-achieving careers to new paths, exploring the motivations and challenges that come with such significant life changes. Aaron shares his journey from being a fighter pilot in the Air Force to becoming a financial advisor, highlighting the emotional and financial aspects of leaving a defined career. The conversation touches on the importance of self-assessment, the value of grit and resilience, and the necessity of aligning one's career with personal values and family needs. Aaron also reflects on the lessons learned from his experiences, emphasizing the importance of community and support during transitions. keywords Second Shift, career transition, financial planning, fighter pilot, personal growth, resilience, identity, parenting, life lessons, entrepreneurship Takeaways
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| "What No One Tells You About Leaving" | 03 Mar 2026 | 00:56:21 | |
Learn more about us: www.targetedwealthsolutions.com The Second Shift Takeaways
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