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TRANSCRIPT: Putting Purpose Over Path: Mark Shrime

Read the full transcript of Dr. Mark Shrime’s talk titled “Putting Purpose Over Path” at TEDxBostonCollege 2024 conference.

Listen to the audio version here:

TRANSCRIPT:

One of my favorite books was written in 1946. Viktor Frankl was a prisoner in the Nazi concentration camps of World War II, and when he got out, he wrote a book called “Man’s Search for Meaning.” In it, he quotes Nietzsche, saying, “He who has a why to live for can bear almost any how.” If you listen carefully to that quote, there’s a hierarchy implied in it.

The why comes first, the how is second. Figure out the purpose first, and then construct a path to meet that purpose. Unfortunately, many of us find ourselves on a bit of an inverted hierarchy. Instead of purpose over path, we find ourselves on a path, and then we have to shoehorn our purpose into that path, and it shows.

The Modern Workplace Crisis

Dissatisfaction at work is an epidemic. 70% of Americans, 80% of people worldwide are unhappy with their jobs, and we’ve started to vote with our feet. Now I come from the world of medicine, so I’ve seen this exodus most acutely in my profession, and it is true. We just came out of a pandemic that gave 20% of us clinical PTSD, but still, in 2021 alone, 117,000 physicians left the workforce in the US.

That is four and a half years of graduating medical school classes leaving in a single year. But we know it’s not just medicine. There was a great resignation in the pandemic, and that one peaked in 2022 when 50 million people left their jobs. Now experts tell us that the great resignation is over, we can breathe a sigh of relief, but all that means is 40 million people leave their jobs every year.

The Turning Point: A Car Accident in Liberia

The pandemic highlighted something that has been brewing for a very long time, and that is that this inverted hierarchy of path over purpose leads to dissatisfaction, to burnout, and to moral distress, and it doesn’t have to be this way. Today I want to talk about what it takes to flip that hierarchy, to put purpose back over path, what it takes not just to start with why, but to actually solve for your own why, my own why. What are the steps that we have to go through if we want to right that hierarchy? And in doing so, I’m going to tell you a bit of my own story, not because my story has any special insight, but because everybody’s why is deeply tied to their own story.

This was 2008. This was my first time living and working as a surgeon in a sub-Saharan African country. I was living in Monrovia, the capital of Liberia, and this particular weekend, about 20 of us decided that we were going to go from Monrovia to a beach town about three hours to the northwest called Robertsport.

The Life-Changing Journey

The drive from Monrovia to Robertsport is pretty simple, but an hour north of the capital, you turn left. The road north from the capital to that left-hand turn was paved. The road west from that left-hand turn to Robertsport was a single track, red dirt road, pretty flat, pretty well-maintained, but punctuated by these rickety wooden bridges over ravines.

So we hired five taxis that were driven by people who couldn’t have been more than like 17 years old, and you all know that the deal with young men in cars is that we like to go fast. So the minute we took that left-hand turn onto the dirt road, they took off, and those of us in the back were loving it. It was a weekend away, it was going to the beach, the wind was in most people’s hair.

The driver of the car that I was in was the fastest. What he would do is on the straight parts of the road, he would book it as fast as he could. Then he’d get to a bridge, he’d stop, he’d take that bridge responsibly, and then book it again to the next bridge. You can kind of see what this is building up to.

If you drive down a dirt road really quickly and stop all of a sudden, you kick up a whole bunch of dust behind you. The car behind us didn’t see us, smashed right into us, and we fell off the bridge and into the ravine. Now they say that time slows down, and it does. I remember really clearly watching the ground come to meet the windshield, and I remember thinking, “Huh, I guess this is how I die.”

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The Reluctant Doctor’s Journey

I’m okay with that. We were all fine after that car accident, but that thought, “This is how I die, and I’m okay with that,” that thought bounced around my head for the two days in Robertsport, and it’s continued to stick with me for the 16 years since. I know now that the reason that I was okay with it was that by 2008, I had started to solve for why. The road to getting there was not straight.

See, I never wanted to be a doctor, like actively, adamantly resisted becoming a doctor. Like all little boys growing up, I wanted to be a philosopher or a rock star, but I grew up reading the stories of missionaries, and what I really wanted to be was a linguist. I was going to be the guy that would disappear into the jungles specifically of Papua New Guinea, create the writing system for a language that had never been written, but I’m also the firstborn son of an immigrant family, which many of you know, sometimes it feels like we’ve only got three options: doctor, lawyer, or failure.

The Path of Resistance

So I went to med school, and I hated med school, like so much that not even 12 months after med school started, I left.