It starts long before the sun rises. The anticipation, the anxiety, the relentless replaying of scenarios in your mind. You?re lying in bed, staring at the ceiling, chasing a sleep that refuses to come. Tomorrow holds a big case?a procedure with no room for error. You?ve done it before, but what if today is different? What if today is the day something goes wrong? The weight presses down harder.
You close your eyes, but instead of rest, you see the OR. The instruments, the drapes, the monitors. Did you remember to double-check the scans? Did you anticipate the complications? It doesn?t matter if it?s a holiday or your day off; the OR lives within you. Surgery isn?t just something you do?it?s something you carry.
The Foundation of Fear: The Training Years
The journey to becoming a surgeon is relentless, starting with the crucible of residency. It?s a time when exceptional training isn?t just a nice-to-have; it?s a survival skill. The goal isn?t just passing in-training exams or securing a fellowship?though those milestones matter immensely. It?s about something far greater: gaining the breadth and depth of experience that prepares you to step into the OR as the most responsible physician, where every decision is yours alone, and the stakes couldn?t be higher.
Each rotation, each night on call, each challenging case builds a reservoir of knowledge and skill. But it?s never enough. The pressure to prepare for the boards is suffocating?mock exams, endless review sessions, sleepless nights of studying. And when you finally score the fellowship, it feels like the starting line, not the finish. This is where you?re pushed to refine your craft to a level of mastery that far exceeds simply ?knowing the steps.? You learn to anticipate the unexpected, to navigate the unpredictable, to lead under pressure.
Because when you walk into the OR as the attending, there?s no safety net. You are the net.
The Morning Of
When the alarm finally drags you from restless dreams, you?re already on edge. Breakfast? Forget it. Your stomach churns at the thought. There?s no appetite for food, only an insatiable need to be in the OR, to begin. Your hands fumble through your morning routine, but your mind is elsewhere. You?re visualizing every step, recalling every lecture, every note, every video you watched the night before. You?ve never done this specific procedure before, not on your own. You?re cramming like a student before finals, only this isn?t theory?this is someone?s life.
The Drive In
The drive to the hospital feels surreal. The roads blur together as you rehearse the case in your mind. Did the rep confirm the implants are ready? Will the anesthetist you trust be on shift today? Will the scrub techs/OR nurses know their roles? A wave of nausea hits as you pull into the parking lot. The veneer of confidence you must wear is a cruel mask, concealing the storm inside. Your heart pounds, your palms sweat, but there?s no time for hesitation. The patient is waiting. The team is waiting. And they all need you to lead.
The OR?Where the Real Battle Begins
Walking into the OR, you slip on your scrubs like armor. You greet your team, each exchange laced with unspoken pressure. They look to you for guidance, for calm, for assurance. But inside, you?re running through every “what if.” The rep meets you by the sterile field, and together you run a quick huddle. Are the implants all here? Do we have backups? You talk through the plan and the contingencies, trying to anticipate every curveball the surgery might throw.
The patient is wheeled in, and for a brief moment, your eyes meet theirs. They?ve placed their trust in you. They don?t see the nerves, the doubts, the sleepless night you endured. They see a confident surgeon, calm and composed. You?re their anchor, their hope. You take a deep breath and begin.
The Duality of the OR
The OR is a paradox. It?s where you feel the most alive and the most vulnerable. Every decision, every movement is a calculation, a test of your skill and focus. The room hums with tension, every team member attuned to the task at hand. Mistakes are not an option, but perfection feels like a distant hope. If the anatomy surprises you, if the instruments don?t fit quite right, if the bleeding doesn?t stop?it all falls on you.
The hours slip by in a haze of concentration. Surgery (for the most part) is an exhausting mental exercise. When the case is over, you step back, exhausted and drained, yet strangely exhilarated. Did you make the right call? Did you miss anything? The weight never truly lifts, but for now, the patient is stable. You tell the family everything went well, offering them the reassurance you wish you could feel yourself.
The Fade of Fear, the Growth of Expertise
Over time, something changes. With each successful case, each lesson learned, the fear begins to fade?not entirely, but enough to leave room for a quiet confidence. The sleepless nights become less frequent as your hands move with practiced ease, your instincts sharpened by repetition. The weight you once carried everywhere now feels lighter, even if it never truly disappears.
But with experience comes new layers of complexity. New innovations and techniques flood the market daily, while medical device companies release products at an unprecedented pace. The challenge is no longer just mastering the fundamentals but staying ahead of the curve. How do you navigate this relentless influx? How do you integrate cutting-edge tools without compromising the confidence and precision your patients depend on?
The answer lies in the lessons of your early years?the relentless pursuit of learning, the discipline of preparation, and the humility to keep growing. As the tools evolve, so must you. Because while the stress of being an early-career surgeon may fade, the responsibility never does. But with every case, every challenge, you prove to yourself why you chose this path.
It?s exhausting. It?s exhilarating. And it?s worth every moment.
About Dr. Goel
Dr. Danny Goel, is an orthopedic surgeon specializing in shoulder procedures and the CEO of PrecisionOS, a Vancouver-based company pioneering virtual reality solutions for surgical training. He earned his medical degree and a Master?s in Science from the University of Manitoba, followed by orthopedic surgery training at the University of Calgary. Dr. Goel completed fellowship training at Western and Harvard University, with additional experience in complex shoulder tendon transfers at the Mayo Clinic. As a Clinical Professor at the University of British Columbia?s Department of Orthopedic Surgery, he contributes to advancing surgical education. Under his leadership, PrecisionOS has developed innovative VR platforms that enhance surgical readiness and patient outcomes.