From the ending of Leonard Mlodinow’s Subliminal: How Your Unconscious Mind Rules Your Behavior:

We choose the facts that we want to believe. We also choose our friends, lovers, and spouses not just because of the way we perceive them but because of the way they perceive us. Unlike phenomena in physics, in life, events can often obey one theory or another, and what actually happens can depend largely upon which theory we choose to believe. It is a gift of the human mind to be extraordinarily open to the theory of ourselves that pushes us in the direction of survival and even happiness.

// 06.12.26

Dr. Cort Wernz, writing about a private equity buyout “Negotiating Blind” in his Substack, The Impression:

The upfront payout the Las Vegas radiologist described wasn’t arbitrary generosity. It wasn’t a bonus. It was his own future income, pulled forward, discounted and paid to him upfront in exchange for accepting less later.

[…]

The radiologist in Las Vegas wasn’t undone by a bad deal. He was undone by a predictable one, structured by people who understood exactly what they were buying, signed by people who understood it less well. That’s not a character flaw. It’s what happens when a profession doesn’t place any serious value on business literacy.

Nice to see a new voice in radiology just doing their thing.

// 06.10.26

The late radiologist Harry Z. Mellins, M.D (1921-2009), arguing that radiologists are clinicians:

The radiologist is a clinician who has sacrificed one of the greatest glories of the practice of medicine, and its greatest responsibility—the daily contact with the ill and with their families—in order to concentrate the more on the other essence of our profession, the pathology of the living. This he sees through the medium of shadows, which has left him open to the charge of not quite being a real doctor.

But shadows, after all, are real. What are we to one another and what is the world to any of us, but an inverted image on the retina. Seeing is one with the mind. The camera does not see; it records. The radiologist perceives a shadow, sees a lesion, and imagines the man. The bedside physician sees the man, perceives the signs, and imagines the lesion. They practice from the outside in, and we from the inside out. Both are clinicians, for in truth, there is no other kind of doctor worthy of the name. The decisive test for all is finally and always at the bedside. This, then, is one concept of the radiologist—with a film on the view box, but the bedside on his mind.

// 06.09.26

The ACR’s RLI Leadership Essentials 201: Preparing for Practice is “a virtual, 4-month [Sept. 1–Dec. 31, 2026] professional development program designed to help residents and fellows build leadership and professional skills often not covered in traditional radiology training but highly valued in practice.” Totally free for ACR members (which is free for trainees).

// 05.26.26