311. There Are No Shortcuts to a Life Well Lived
If a line threads through Jessie's retreats, coaching, and conversations. It comes from Enia Oakes' book 108 Notes from a Studio in Oakland: "There are no shortcuts to a big life. There are many shortcuts to a life that looks big on the outside, but is killing you on the inside."
Jessie and Ni-Cheng share two stories, two entry points, one shared truth: you don't get to skip the uncomfortable middle.
Two different catalysts, the same awakening
Ni-Cheng's catalyst was loud. At 31, in the middle of a pulmonary critical care fellowship, with a newborn at home, she was diagnosed with breast cancer. She describes it as her body stopping her in her tracks — telling her, clearly, that the pace and patterns she was holding couldn't continue. Fifteen years later, marking her cancerversary, she shares the framing she now uses for her life and her children: BC (before cancer) and AD (after diagnosis). Her BC child was gestated in perfectionism and stress. Her AD child was gestated in a mindfulness practice and meditative movement. Both children now reflect that chemical and emotional milieu.
Jessie's catalyst was slower and harder to describe. She wasn't drowning. She was an attending pediatrician working 80% time, with leadership roles she chose and changed, a practice she liked, a family, a home, and an organization genuinely forward-thinking about physician wellness.
Still — an inner knowing, persistent and impossible to dismiss, that she was out of alignment.
She describes, with real honesty, the uncomfortable truth of being bored. Not because the work was boring, but because it no longer made her feel alive.
Both stories land in the same place: if you don't choose who you're becoming, circumstances choose for you.
The day she turned in her resignation
Jessie tells the story of a storytelling event in the Redwoods where a new friend asked her, "You just jumped?" The honest answer was yes. She had backup plans, but COVID dissolved them, and she was jumping regardless. What she wants listeners to hear is what no one tells you about that jump: she felt sick the day she turned in her resignation. Not relieved. Sick. Her brain screamed that "sick" meant "wrong". It didn't. It meant she had just committed to something she cared about enormously.
This is expansion anxiety.
Not anticipatory anxiety about a bad thing coming, but the discomfort of growing beyond who you've been. Jessie likens it to the sleep regressions pediatricians know well — the child is learning to walk, to separate, to individuate, and the body protests. Adults regress the same way, just under different labels.
Jumping with a life preserver
The invitation is not to jump recklessly. It's to jump with a life preserver. For Jessie, that meant coaching, mindfulness, community, and genuine care for her physical health during the transition. For Ni-Cheng, it has meant an intentional mindfulness practice built out of necessity, rock climbing (she's now top-rope belay certified), dragon boat paddling with Team Survivor San Diego Sea Dragons, volleyball, and a robust mental health care team navigating postpartum OCD and grief around her post-cancer body. Neither of them skipped steps.
Let the easy parts be easy
One of the most powerful moments in the conversation is a small exchange near the end. Jessie says, "Let the parts that are easy be easy." Ni-Cheng agrees.
They name something many high-performing women physicians rarely let themselves name: the belief that struggle is proof of strength. It's not. The struggle is simply the struggle.
Sometimes the way forward is not more effort — it's permission to receive what is already easy.
Pearls of Wisdom
"There are no shortcuts to a big life. There are many shortcuts to a life that looks big on the outside, but is killing you on the inside." — Enia Oakes
If you don't choose who you're becoming, circumstances choose for you.
Not choosing is still a choice.
Jump — but jump with a life preserver.
When you feel untethered, it often means you're growing.
Struggle is not proof of worth. The struggle is simply the struggle.
Let the easy parts be easy.
The person you become will catch you when you fall — if you've taken good care of her.
Reflection Questions
If you were building your life on purpose starting today, what would stay and what would go?
Where are you taking shortcuts to a life that looks big but doesn't feel like yours?
What life preservers do you already have, and what do you still need before you jump?
Closing Invitation
If something in this episode landed — the boredom, the inner knowing, the sense that your life looks big on the outside but costs too much inside — you are not lost. You are in the liminal space where real change happens. The discomfort you're feeling is not evidence that something is wrong with you. It is evidence that something truer is trying to emerge.
You don't have to jump alone, and you don't have to jump without a life preserver. The work of building a life well lived is slower, gentler, and more honest than the world typically rewards — and it is absolutely possible. I'd be honored to walk with you through it.
If this episode speaks to you, curiosity is the starting place, not the destination.
Listening is a beautiful start. Stepping into an environment designed for curiosity is where things begin to open.
The Connect in Nature retreat that Ni-Cheng and I will co-lead this summer is designed around everything we talk about in this episode: space, nature, community, embodiment, and the permission to explore without needing to produce or perform.
Retreats at Nicasio Creek Farm offer the same optimal conditions.
Coaching, one-on-one or in small groups, is another way to explore what you are asking for more room in your life.
www.jessiemahoneymd.com/retreats
www.jessiemahoneymd.com/jessies-blog
Nothing shared in the Healing Medicine Podcast is medical advice.
The Healing Medicine Podcast was formerly known as the Mindful Healers Podcast.
FAQs
What is this episode about? Two physicians — Dr. Jessie Mahoney and Dr. Ni-Cheng Liang — sharing honestly about the non-linear path to a more aligned life, one after a cancer diagnosis at 31 and the other after a slower midlife awakening as an accomplished attending.
What is "expansion anxiety"? The discomfort of growing beyond who you've been. It's not evidence that something is wrong — it's often evidence that something new is emerging. Jessie compares it to developmental regressions in children.
I look fine on the outside. Is this episode for me? Yes. Especially so. This episode is explicitly for physicians who have checked the boxes, are successful on paper, and are carrying the sense that something essential is missing inside.
Is a life well lived the same as quitting medicine? No. The invitation is to choose your life on purpose rather than by default — which for some physicians means staying and practicing differently, and for others means a transition.
What is the Connect in Nature Retreat? A CME wellness retreat co-led by Jessie and Ni-Cheng at Nicasio Creek Farm. Details:www.jessiemahoneymd.com/retreats.
Nothing shared in the Healing Medicine Podcast is medical advice. The Healing Medicine Podcast was formerly known as the Mindful Healers Podcast.