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Home » Dr. Glaucomflecken’s Speech at U-M Medical School 2024 Commencement (Transcript)

Dr. Glaucomflecken’s Speech at U-M Medical School 2024 Commencement (Transcript)

Here is the full transcript of comedian and ophthalmologist William Flanary, aka Dr. Glaucomflecken’s speech at University of Michigan Medical School 2024 Commencement address on May 10 in Hill Auditorium.

Listen to the audio version here:

TRANSCRIPT:

Thank you, this is a new costume for me, you guys, it’s great. Thank you, Dean Weinstein, faculty, graduates, family and friends, let’s just get this out of the way. Yes, I am a TikTok comedian. And yes, they meant to invite me today.

As far as I know, it wasn’t a mistake, family and friends. I’m just as surprised as you are. I am not an academic physician. I am not what you would call scholarly.

Believe it or not, I don’t even have any Nobel Prizes. But what I do have is over 100 hours of social media content, most of which is pretty funny. I want to thank the graduating class first and foremost for inviting me to share this important day with all of you. And I’d also like to thank the dean for being totally cool with it.

This is my second time visiting Ann Arbor. The first time was in 2013 when I interviewed for ophthalmology residency. I was enamored by this place. Sometimes you just know you belong somewhere.

Matching for Residency

I remember excitedly coming home and telling my wife, Kristin, about all the wonderful people, the amazing facilities, the Coney dogs. And I remember her saying to me, “OK, but what about winter?” And I was like, “Don’t worry about it. I’m sure it’s fine.”

But as soon as I left that interview, I knew I’d be ranking Michigan number one. So you can imagine my disappointment. When I opened up that envelope and I did not see the University of Michigan there on the page, I had matched up the University of Iowa, a wonderful ophthalmology program, but it wasn’t my first choice.

So what did I do? Well, I did what we all do. I celebrated. You know, I hugged my family and friends. I celebrated my successful match. And then I swore revenge on the program that passed over. But you know what? I’m standing here now. It all worked out.

Memories of Graduation

So no hard feelings, you guys. Graduates, 11 years ago, I sat where you sit today, excited, a little bit terrified to begin my medical career. I still remember a lot about that day, celebrating with my classmates and my friends and family on that beautiful spring day.

The one thing I don’t remember is the commencement address. I think it went a little long. Now, I have no preconceived notion that what I’m going to tell you today will remain encoded in your long-term memory.

Like the Krebs cycle, coagulation cascade, or those of you going into ophthalmology, anything below the nasal bridge, my words will fade with time. And decades from now, when your grandchildren will ask you who spoke at your med school graduation commencement, you’ll fall silent. You’ll look off into the distance before saying, “I think it was from TikTok.” To which your grandchildren will respond, “What was TikTok?”

The Feeling of Graduation

I may not remember the words delivered to my graduating class by the speaker that day, but I do remember how those words made me feel, excited, hopeful, proud, with a healthy dose of imposter syndrome. It’s that feeling that someday, very soon, somebody is going to figure out that you have no idea what you’re doing. We’ve all had that feeling, even the dean.

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You see, here’s the problem with these commencement addresses. People like me stand up here and tell you about the enormous responsibility you’re taking on as physicians, how it’s up to you as the future of medicine to help lead us toward a more equitable, a more compassionate, a more humane health care system. I can tell you all those things, which are all true, by the way, but I know what many of you are thinking right now, “Dr. G, that’s all great, like I’d love to save health care. Can I just get through residency first?”

The answer is yes, of course. In fact, you can think of residency as a prerequisite for saving U.S. health care. So allow me to give you some advice to help you survive residency so that you can get on to the business of saving health care.

The Road Ahead

Okay, here’s what’s going to happen over the next few years. You ready? All right. Today, you’re going to graduate. Obviously. Tomorrow, you’ll sleep in. I know how taxing fourth-year med school is. You need a break.

A few weeks from now, you’ll receive your first request in the mail from the University of Michigan asking for a donation. You’re broke. There will be plenty of opportunities for donations later, okay? Even as you move across the country throughout your career, Michigan will find you, all right? They have a team dedicated to finding you.

Now in July, you’ll begin your intern year, and one of the first things you’re going to do is make a mistake. But despite your best efforts and the world-class education that you’ve received here, you will make mistakes. Some will be small. You’ll order the wrong lab test, or you’ll sleep through a page, or you’ll forget to check a patient’s vision before calling an ophthalmology consult.

Learning from Mistakes

Other mistakes will be big, mistakes that will shake your confidence, that will make you question whether you have what it takes to do this job. Please don’t keep those mistakes to yourself. Talk about them. Tell your co-residents. Tell your attendings.

When you talk to people about your mistakes, you realize something very important, that you’re not the only person who’s ever screwed up. When I was an intern, every time I’d make a mistake, I would say, “I bet Atul Gawande also accidentally ordered a suppository.” That helps. You do your best to avoid mistakes, but when they happen, you learn from it, and you realize that you’re still a good doctor.

You’re just also human.