 Here are the three most important lessons that I learned as a doctor. Number one, your patients care much more about your ability to care for them and less so about your knowledge to care for them. Often in medical school I was thinking that I had to know everything under the book to be able to take care of my patients so they could trust me and not look like an idiot in front of them. But often I understand that now if I can walk in, build that connection. Patient understands that I actually want to care for them that we're on the same team. Any answers that I don't have for them, we'll figure it out. Number two, it is okay not to know everything. In fact, most doctors who play this pompous role of being very smart are actually quite brilliant, but there are many things that they don't understand that they try not to put themselves into. But it's okay and encouraged to admit that you will not know everything. There will be things that you understand that you will forget shortly after. There will be things that you will always remember that you will feel like a nice master to. And then finally lesson number three is that your definition of hard work changes all the time throughout the process. Every part of the journey looked like it was going to be the hardest thing until you overcome it and you come up with a new definition of hard work for yourself. You're capable of much more than you're able to do and things just look easy in retrospect because you have the ability to put in a hard work for the long term.