It’s a common experience: we find it easier to advise others on their issues than to follow our own advice. This discrepancy hit home for me recently during a health scare. My doctor advised immediate surgery, but I thought I could wait a couple of weeks. My schedule seemed too packed to accommodate an urgent procedure. It wasn't until I talked to my mom, a pediatric hematologist oncologist, that I realized how skewed my priorities were. Her immediate and unequivocal response was, “Any of that can get rescheduled. You need to take care of this right now.”
Initial Reaction
When my doctor advised immediate surgery, my first reaction was to look at my calendar. It was filled with meetings, deadlines, and commitments that seemed too important to delay. I felt a deep sense of responsibility to those I had commitments with and feared letting people down by canceling or rescheduling. The urgency of my health issue was clouded by the perceived importance of my schedule.
Why is it so much easier to give advice than to take it? When advising others, we see the situation from a detached perspective, unburdened by the emotional and cognitive biases that cloud our judgment when it's our own issue. We’re not influenced by the overabundance of knowledge and personal stakes that often create unhelpful narratives.
We see all the irrelevant minutiae in high resolution in our own lives, but our distance allows us to focus on only what is most important in others. This clarity is what enables us to give sound advice to others, yet it becomes a hindrance when we try to apply the same logic to our own problems. Our personal involvement and the wealth of information we have about our own lives can lead to indecision and poor choices.
Objective advice from someone who isn't emotionally invested in the situation can be a lifesaver, literally. My mom’s intervention was crucial. Her medical background and clear-headed assessment cut through my confusion and prompted me to take immediate action, which likely prevented further complications.
The upshot? I was able to get in with the surgeon the next day, and by Monday had the results. They were 100% positive: all the margins of the cuts were clean, meaning the cancer had been removed. This news put me and my family in a much better frame of mind, highlighting the importance of prompt action in health matters.
Broader Implications
Arthur Schopenhauer's wisdom on health being paramount resonated deeply with me after this experience. He said, “[N]ine-tenths of our happiness depends upon health alone. With health, everything is a source of pleasure; without it, nothing else, whatever it may be, is enjoyable...The greatest of follies is to sacrifice health for any other kind of happiness, whatever it may be, for gain, advancement, learning or fame, let alone, then, for fleeting sensual pleasures. Everything else should rather be postponed to it.”
This incident was a stark reminder that health should always be our top priority. It’s easy to let other concerns take precedence, but as Schopenhauer pointed out, without health, nothing else truly matters.
As a result of this experience, what am I now doing differently?
While it’s easy to give advice, taking it—especially when it concerns our own well-being—is often much harder. This experience reinforced the importance of prioritizing health and the value of having a strong support system. I’m grateful to my mom for her decisive intervention and reminder that our health must always come first. So, take care of yourself, listen to those who care about you, and remember that everything else can wait.