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Oct. 18, 2023

How to make the most of your mentors

How to make the most of your mentors
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Clinician Researcher

Sometimes, it can feel as if finding a research mentor is the end of the journey. Unfortunately, it is only the beginning of your hard work. In this episode we explore how your role as a mentee is critical in shaping your experience. Key Points Discussed:

  • The importance of taking ownership of your mentoring relationship.
  • The significance of clear career objectives.
  • The value of honest, open communication.
  • The role of proactive participation.
  • The power of gratitude.
Links and Resources Mentioned:Call to Action: As you listen to this episode, consider how you can take ownership of your mentorship experience. Reflect on your career goals and the role your mentors can play in achieving them. If you're a clinician looking to transition to a clinician-scientist role, reach out for personalized coaching and guidance. Send an email to info@coagcoach.com.
Transcript
1 00:00:00,000 --> 00:00:05,860 Welcome to the Clinician Researcher podcast, where academic clinicians learn the skills 2 00:00:05,860 --> 00:00:11,260 to build their own research program, whether or not they have a mentor. 3 00:00:11,260 --> 00:00:17,340 As clinicians, we spend a decade or more as trainees learning to take care of patients. 4 00:00:17,340 --> 00:00:22,380 When we finally start our careers, we want to build research programs, but then we find 5 00:00:22,380 --> 00:00:27,780 that our years of clinical training did not adequately prepare us to lead our research 6 00:00:27,780 --> 00:00:29,200 program. 7 00:00:29,200 --> 00:00:35,480 Through no fault of our own, we struggle to find mentors, and when we can't, we quit. 8 00:00:35,480 --> 00:00:40,580 However, clinicians hold the keys to the greatest research breakthroughs. 9 00:00:40,580 --> 00:00:46,200 For this reason, the Clinician Researcher podcast exists to give academic clinicians 10 00:00:46,200 --> 00:00:51,800 the tools to build their own research program, whether or not they have a mentor. 11 00:00:51,800 --> 00:01:01,040 Now introducing your host, Toyosi Onwuemene. 12 00:01:01,040 --> 00:01:04,240 Welcome to the Clinician Researcher podcast. 13 00:01:04,240 --> 00:01:08,820 I'm your host, Toyosi Onwuemene, and it is such a pleasure to be talking with you today. 14 00:01:08,820 --> 00:01:14,280 Thank you for taking the time to listen in as we talk about how to make the most of your 15 00:01:14,280 --> 00:01:15,280 mentors. 16 00:01:15,280 --> 00:01:22,760 Now, sometimes there is this sense that the mentor is going to just do everything for 17 00:01:22,760 --> 00:01:23,760 you. 18 00:01:23,760 --> 00:01:30,200 It's going to be the one to lead you from A to B to C to Z. Everything rises and falls 19 00:01:30,200 --> 00:01:35,320 with this one mentor, and sometimes it doesn't work out that way. 20 00:01:35,320 --> 00:01:38,720 We're disappointed, and we're just annoyed, and we're like, well, if this mentor would 21 00:01:38,720 --> 00:01:42,160 have come through for me, my career would have been better, or we call our mentors the 22 00:01:42,160 --> 00:01:43,160 Tor mentors. 23 00:01:43,160 --> 00:01:49,480 Wow, so many challenges can happen in our mentoring relationships, but it's not because 24 00:01:49,480 --> 00:01:50,480 of the mentor. 25 00:01:50,480 --> 00:01:54,560 I would say that if you've had a challenging mentoring relationship, please do not blame 26 00:01:54,560 --> 00:01:55,560 the mentor. 27 00:01:55,560 --> 00:02:00,880 And yes, I don't know your mentor, and maybe your mentor was the horrible person tormenting 28 00:02:00,880 --> 00:02:01,880 you. 29 00:02:01,880 --> 00:02:02,880 I'm not saying that they were not. 30 00:02:02,880 --> 00:02:07,720 I certainly know people who do that, and I've had my fair share of mentors who felt like 31 00:02:07,720 --> 00:02:13,760 Tor mentors, but I want to say that the relationship building is up to you. 32 00:02:13,760 --> 00:02:19,120 And one of the ways that you get the best and the most out of a mentor is really taking 33 00:02:19,120 --> 00:02:21,880 ownership of the mentoring relationship. 34 00:02:21,880 --> 00:02:25,160 And many times we look up to our mentors and we're like, well, they're older, they're more 35 00:02:25,160 --> 00:02:27,360 senior, therefore they're responsible. 36 00:02:27,360 --> 00:02:32,560 But in reality, you are responsible for this mentoring relationship. 37 00:02:32,560 --> 00:02:33,960 You are. 38 00:02:33,960 --> 00:02:38,360 You're responsible to get out of it what you want from it. 39 00:02:38,360 --> 00:02:41,880 You are in this mentoring relationship for you. 40 00:02:41,880 --> 00:02:43,800 Yes, your mentor is going to benefit. 41 00:02:43,800 --> 00:02:47,080 And yes, they're going to love mentoring you because you're so awesome. 42 00:02:47,080 --> 00:02:50,120 And everyone loves to mentor the next generation of scientists. 43 00:02:50,120 --> 00:02:52,360 So you are, I mean, it's a great relationship. 44 00:02:52,360 --> 00:02:54,600 Your mentors are so excited to mentor you. 45 00:02:54,600 --> 00:02:59,280 But if you're going to get what is needed to shape your own career, it's going to be 46 00:02:59,280 --> 00:03:02,760 because you create the opportunity to do it. 47 00:03:02,760 --> 00:03:07,040 Now there's some mentors who don't need coaching, who don't need training, who are able to just 48 00:03:07,040 --> 00:03:11,480 take a person and really help them advance in their careers. 49 00:03:11,480 --> 00:03:16,600 But for the most part, if a mentoring relationship is going to succeed, it's because the mentee 50 00:03:16,600 --> 00:03:20,720 knows how to get the most out of the mentor. 51 00:03:20,720 --> 00:03:26,440 And so I'm going to talk today about strategies that you can use to make the most use of your 52 00:03:26,440 --> 00:03:27,720 mentors. 53 00:03:27,720 --> 00:03:33,000 So remember in our last episode, we talked about the importance of you taking ownership 54 00:03:33,000 --> 00:03:34,560 of your career? 55 00:03:34,560 --> 00:03:38,960 Well taking ownership of your career means taking ownership of your mentoring relationships 56 00:03:38,960 --> 00:03:40,520 as well. 57 00:03:40,520 --> 00:03:46,760 And to do that, you really need to first be able to set clear goals and expectations. 58 00:03:46,760 --> 00:03:49,200 What do you want for yourself? 59 00:03:49,200 --> 00:03:52,080 What do you want out of this career? 60 00:03:52,080 --> 00:03:53,800 Why are you here? 61 00:03:53,800 --> 00:03:55,800 What do you want out of this career? 62 00:03:55,800 --> 00:04:01,720 And if you're very clear on where you're going, then you can ask someone to help you get there. 63 00:04:01,720 --> 00:04:07,280 It's like the person that is out walking and you stop them and you're like, sir, are you 64 00:04:07,280 --> 00:04:08,720 lost? 65 00:04:08,720 --> 00:04:09,720 And they're like, yes, I'm lost. 66 00:04:09,720 --> 00:04:10,720 I need directions. 67 00:04:10,720 --> 00:04:11,720 And like, okay, where are you going? 68 00:04:11,720 --> 00:04:14,160 And then I'm like, I'm not really sure. 69 00:04:14,160 --> 00:04:18,480 How can you give such a person directions? 70 00:04:18,480 --> 00:04:23,040 And perhaps you're benevolent and you're like, oh, okay, well, give me a sense of where you 71 00:04:23,040 --> 00:04:24,560 think you might want to go. 72 00:04:24,560 --> 00:04:25,960 And they're like, well, I'm not really sure. 73 00:04:25,960 --> 00:04:26,960 I could go here. 74 00:04:26,960 --> 00:04:27,960 I could go there. 75 00:04:27,960 --> 00:04:28,960 Maybe I'll go there. 76 00:04:28,960 --> 00:04:31,120 I'm not sure I could go anywhere. 77 00:04:31,120 --> 00:04:34,560 How can you help a person like that? 78 00:04:34,560 --> 00:04:39,560 Someone who doesn't have a clear address to which they're going is very difficult to give 79 00:04:39,560 --> 00:04:41,060 directions to. 80 00:04:41,060 --> 00:04:44,020 And it's the same in your own career. 81 00:04:44,020 --> 00:04:49,860 If you're not very clear about where you're going, no mentor can help you get there because 82 00:04:49,860 --> 00:04:50,860 you don't know. 83 00:04:50,860 --> 00:04:56,040 And like, isn't that from Alice in Wonderland where the Cheshire Cat asked Alice where she 84 00:04:56,040 --> 00:04:58,880 was going and she was like, well, nowhere really. 85 00:04:58,880 --> 00:05:01,200 And he was like, well, then it doesn't matter which way you go. 86 00:05:01,200 --> 00:05:02,480 And it's the same thing. 87 00:05:02,480 --> 00:05:07,600 You want to clearly define your goals because when you clearly define your goals and you 88 00:05:07,600 --> 00:05:09,880 understand how this mentor fits in. 89 00:05:09,880 --> 00:05:14,080 So remember, there are different types of mentoring relationships. 90 00:05:14,080 --> 00:05:16,200 There's a research mentor in relationship. 91 00:05:16,200 --> 00:05:19,040 There's also sponsorship that happens as well. 92 00:05:19,040 --> 00:05:21,040 And then there's career development mentorship. 93 00:05:21,040 --> 00:05:23,960 So there are different kinds of mentoring relationships. 94 00:05:23,960 --> 00:05:26,860 What you need depends on where you're going. 95 00:05:26,860 --> 00:05:30,400 Perhaps you've already gotten a lot of research mentoring and you're not necessarily looking 96 00:05:30,400 --> 00:05:31,440 for another mentor. 97 00:05:31,440 --> 00:05:34,640 But this person is someone you've identified as someone who can really help you move forward. 98 00:05:34,640 --> 00:05:37,000 Well, in what way are they going to help you move forward? 99 00:05:37,000 --> 00:05:41,240 Where are you going so that you're very clear, you know where you're going so that you're 100 00:05:41,240 --> 00:05:45,440 very clear on how they can help you get there. 101 00:05:45,440 --> 00:05:52,280 And so if you have very specific achievable goals, it helps you and your mentor stay focused 102 00:05:52,280 --> 00:05:54,160 on what you need to accomplish. 103 00:05:54,160 --> 00:05:59,520 It helps you not go on the tangent of the great project that you could take on that 104 00:05:59,520 --> 00:06:00,960 you don't really want to do. 105 00:06:00,960 --> 00:06:05,120 But now you're trying not to make your mentor upset or you know, you're trying to please 106 00:06:05,120 --> 00:06:06,120 your mentor. 107 00:06:06,120 --> 00:06:07,720 So you're going off tangent. 108 00:06:07,720 --> 00:06:12,400 And so the way that you make the most out of your mentor is to set very clear goals 109 00:06:12,400 --> 00:06:17,520 and expectations so you know where you want to go and you become clear about when you're 110 00:06:17,520 --> 00:06:20,440 veering off your goals. 111 00:06:20,440 --> 00:06:25,080 And I will tell you that the process of setting goals and expectations is very hard. 112 00:06:25,080 --> 00:06:26,080 This is difficult. 113 00:06:26,080 --> 00:06:27,580 It's number one for a reason. 114 00:06:27,580 --> 00:06:28,940 It is hard. 115 00:06:28,940 --> 00:06:35,640 It's hard because in our training in medicine, there's the prescribed path. 116 00:06:35,640 --> 00:06:37,560 There's like, this is where everybody goes. 117 00:06:37,560 --> 00:06:41,840 This is at the end of four years, you graduate medical school, there's no questions asked. 118 00:06:41,840 --> 00:06:44,240 At the end of three years, the residency is over. 119 00:06:44,240 --> 00:06:47,480 This is the way it works all the time. 120 00:06:47,480 --> 00:06:51,240 And when we get to the place where we're planning our own careers, there isn't such a clear 121 00:06:51,240 --> 00:06:52,320 path. 122 00:06:52,320 --> 00:06:57,440 And so we haven't been practicing the muscle of defining where we want to go. 123 00:06:57,440 --> 00:07:01,360 And so it's something that we haven't been exercising the muscle of defining where we 124 00:07:01,360 --> 00:07:02,360 want to go. 125 00:07:02,360 --> 00:07:03,960 And so it's helpful that we start to do that. 126 00:07:03,960 --> 00:07:09,560 So setting clear goals and expectations for yourself is the most important first step 127 00:07:09,560 --> 00:07:11,440 in making the best use of your mentors. 128 00:07:11,440 --> 00:07:13,400 So that's number one. 129 00:07:13,400 --> 00:07:16,720 Number two is to communicate these goals and expectations. 130 00:07:16,720 --> 00:07:24,880 And so sometimes, okay, number two is to communicate these goals and expectations effectively. 131 00:07:24,880 --> 00:07:29,280 So you know where you're going inside your head, but nobody else knows it. 132 00:07:29,280 --> 00:07:33,520 They still can't help you get there or give you the directions that are necessary to get 133 00:07:33,520 --> 00:07:34,640 you there. 134 00:07:34,640 --> 00:07:38,560 Because although the goals are very clear to you, you're not communicating them. 135 00:07:38,560 --> 00:07:42,480 And part of communicating is really being open and honest. 136 00:07:42,480 --> 00:07:48,320 And this can be really hard, this effective communication, because we don't want to disappoint 137 00:07:48,320 --> 00:07:49,460 our mentors. 138 00:07:49,460 --> 00:07:55,280 If we come into their program and they say, oh, my goodness, I'm so glad you're here with 139 00:07:55,280 --> 00:07:58,200 your expertise, you're going to help me move this project forward. 140 00:07:58,200 --> 00:08:00,240 It's going to be so awesome. 141 00:08:00,240 --> 00:08:03,280 And you're a little bit deflated because you're like, well, that's not why you wanted that 142 00:08:03,280 --> 00:08:04,280 mentor specifically. 143 00:08:04,280 --> 00:08:07,360 And you're not interested in moving in that new direction. 144 00:08:07,360 --> 00:08:09,400 But you don't want to disappoint them. 145 00:08:09,400 --> 00:08:13,600 And maybe they're the number one research mentor in the whole institution, and you don't 146 00:08:13,600 --> 00:08:18,020 want to be the one mentee who fails in their expectation. 147 00:08:18,020 --> 00:08:19,560 And so then you don't share. 148 00:08:19,560 --> 00:08:21,960 You don't share that that's not where you want to go. 149 00:08:21,960 --> 00:08:26,140 And then you start on a project that you don't really want to be on. 150 00:08:26,140 --> 00:08:27,840 And it can be challenging. 151 00:08:27,840 --> 00:08:33,840 And so that's why you need to maintain open and honest communication with your mentors. 152 00:08:33,840 --> 00:08:36,880 And if there's something you disagree with, if there's a direction they're trying to take 153 00:08:36,880 --> 00:08:42,020 you in that you don't want to go, the importance of stopping and saying, hey, I really love 154 00:08:42,020 --> 00:08:43,020 that idea. 155 00:08:43,020 --> 00:08:45,160 And that's not where I want to go. 156 00:08:45,160 --> 00:08:48,120 And that's where it goes back to number one, setting clear goals and expectations. 157 00:08:48,120 --> 00:08:52,400 So you do know when you're veering off tangent, and you can be very clear and communicate 158 00:08:52,400 --> 00:08:54,160 it to a mentor. 159 00:08:54,160 --> 00:08:59,520 And so you want to make sure that you are open and honest in your communication. 160 00:08:59,520 --> 00:09:03,200 And if you're not able to do that, I will tell you that this is where a coach can be 161 00:09:03,200 --> 00:09:05,940 helpful to help you clarify what is your desire. 162 00:09:05,940 --> 00:09:07,920 What is the challenge that you have? 163 00:09:07,920 --> 00:09:10,200 What is your true feeling about it? 164 00:09:10,200 --> 00:09:15,360 So that you can then choose how to best communicate with your mentor. 165 00:09:15,360 --> 00:09:20,860 So you definitely want to make sure that your communication is open, it's honest, it's effective. 166 00:09:20,860 --> 00:09:25,440 You want to keep them up to date on your goals. 167 00:09:25,440 --> 00:09:29,120 And you know, as goals are changing, because goals are not static things. 168 00:09:29,120 --> 00:09:31,860 You master something, you want to move on to the next thing. 169 00:09:31,860 --> 00:09:34,560 Or you see that you have a new direction you want to set. 170 00:09:34,560 --> 00:09:39,920 You want to be able to communicate them clearly so that as the mentor is trying to help you 171 00:09:39,920 --> 00:09:42,560 move forward, they know exactly how to do that. 172 00:09:42,560 --> 00:09:45,320 Okay, so that's number two, communicate effectively. 173 00:09:45,320 --> 00:09:48,640 Number three is to be proactive. 174 00:09:48,640 --> 00:09:50,480 You've got to be proactive. 175 00:09:50,480 --> 00:09:52,240 I was not a proactive mentee. 176 00:09:52,240 --> 00:09:56,920 I was the one who was always waiting for the mentor to find me and say, hey, how's it going? 177 00:09:56,920 --> 00:09:57,920 What do you need? 178 00:09:57,920 --> 00:10:04,160 And to be honest, when I finally, I think grew up in my mentoring relationships, I recognized 179 00:10:04,160 --> 00:10:08,400 that the mentoring relationships were for me, therefore I needed to be proactive in 180 00:10:08,400 --> 00:10:09,400 the mentoring relationships. 181 00:10:09,400 --> 00:10:13,840 And part of that is making sure you're clear on how this mentor helps you like, how does 182 00:10:13,840 --> 00:10:15,520 this mentor help you? 183 00:10:15,520 --> 00:10:19,240 And if you are very clear about the gap that you're trying to fill with this mentoring 184 00:10:19,240 --> 00:10:24,480 relationship, then take ownership and fill the gap. 185 00:10:24,480 --> 00:10:29,800 Help the mentor help you schedule the meetings as you need to prepare questions and topics 186 00:10:29,800 --> 00:10:30,800 for discussion. 187 00:10:30,800 --> 00:10:32,520 Don't let them don't don't show up. 188 00:10:32,520 --> 00:10:34,160 And then they're like, oh, great, I'm glad you're here. 189 00:10:34,160 --> 00:10:35,160 This is what I want to talk about. 190 00:10:35,160 --> 00:10:37,120 I mean, it's great if they want to do that. 191 00:10:37,120 --> 00:10:40,160 But you have a clear purpose and a plan for this mentor in your life. 192 00:10:40,160 --> 00:10:46,280 So you want to make sure you are proactive in, you know, preparing the questions that 193 00:10:46,280 --> 00:10:50,580 help you, the help lead you to the answers that move your research forward. 194 00:10:50,580 --> 00:10:54,540 And so when you're proactive and demonstrating your commitment, it helps. 195 00:10:54,540 --> 00:10:58,880 It helps because well, the person who has specificity around where they want to go is 196 00:10:58,880 --> 00:11:03,600 so much easier to help than the person who's just not sure, doesn't really want to reach 197 00:11:03,600 --> 00:11:04,600 out. 198 00:11:04,600 --> 00:11:10,240 And to be honest, you know, mentors have so much going on in their lives that if you never 199 00:11:10,240 --> 00:11:14,640 showed up, they might they might wonder where you are, but they may not necessarily have 200 00:11:14,640 --> 00:11:16,980 the bandwidth to reach out and say, how are you doing? 201 00:11:16,980 --> 00:11:21,200 And remember, a mentoring relationship is not like a mother, son or mother daughter 202 00:11:21,200 --> 00:11:22,200 relationship. 203 00:11:22,200 --> 00:11:26,360 This is not like a nurturing, like, oh, my love, how are you? 204 00:11:26,360 --> 00:11:30,640 It's great if you have that and if you have that wonderful, good for you. 205 00:11:30,640 --> 00:11:32,320 But it doesn't need to be that way. 206 00:11:32,320 --> 00:11:35,080 It really is a professional relationship. 207 00:11:35,080 --> 00:11:40,880 And if you are getting what you need in your personal and professional goal, I'm sorry, 208 00:11:40,880 --> 00:11:45,120 if you're getting what you need in terms of your research growth, good for you. 209 00:11:45,120 --> 00:11:47,600 That's pretty much you have what you need. 210 00:11:47,600 --> 00:11:49,400 And maybe your mentor is not warm and fuzzy. 211 00:11:49,400 --> 00:11:53,720 Remember, you're not there for this mentor for warmness, warmth and fuzziness. 212 00:11:53,720 --> 00:11:58,000 You can have other mentors, especially outside of academia, to give you the warmth and fuzziness 213 00:11:58,000 --> 00:11:59,000 needed. 214 00:11:59,000 --> 00:12:01,320 But you want to be clear about how this mentor helps you. 215 00:12:01,320 --> 00:12:06,920 And then you want to be proactive about getting them to help you. 216 00:12:06,920 --> 00:12:11,880 The other thing is the importance of learning from your mentors experiences. 217 00:12:11,880 --> 00:12:15,760 So your mentors are living in a different world, or at least they came up at a different 218 00:12:15,760 --> 00:12:18,200 time, a different era than you are. 219 00:12:18,200 --> 00:12:19,920 They had different challenges. 220 00:12:19,920 --> 00:12:22,740 But overall, the themes are similar. 221 00:12:22,740 --> 00:12:25,920 And so it's helpful to learn from their experience. 222 00:12:25,920 --> 00:12:29,120 It's helpful to listen more than you speak. 223 00:12:29,120 --> 00:12:31,440 So yes, you're the one being proactive. 224 00:12:31,440 --> 00:12:33,280 You're the one who's bringing the agenda. 225 00:12:33,280 --> 00:12:36,320 You're the one who's saying, hey, this is how I want you to help me. 226 00:12:36,320 --> 00:12:40,080 But when you do ask questions, you want to make sure you listen. 227 00:12:40,080 --> 00:12:45,440 You know, let them ask them questions about their past successes and their failures. 228 00:12:45,440 --> 00:12:47,240 Ask especially about the failures. 229 00:12:47,240 --> 00:12:49,440 People don't talk about failures enough. 230 00:12:49,440 --> 00:12:52,040 And sometimes hearing about the failures is enough for you. 231 00:12:52,040 --> 00:12:54,400 It inspires you and encourages you. 232 00:12:54,400 --> 00:12:56,440 Because you're like, oh, you failed. 233 00:12:56,440 --> 00:13:01,080 And you're still here or you're doing awesome, even though you failed. 234 00:13:01,080 --> 00:13:03,680 And it just helps you move forward in a different way. 235 00:13:03,680 --> 00:13:07,360 But the only way you find out is when you listen. 236 00:13:07,360 --> 00:13:13,080 And so in listening, you are able to get insights that perhaps you wouldn't have been able to 237 00:13:13,080 --> 00:13:19,840 get before when you're very focused on just, you know, the challenge that's ahead of you. 238 00:13:19,840 --> 00:13:24,800 And so definitely take time to listen and learn from their experiences and make sure 239 00:13:24,800 --> 00:13:29,840 that you are able to really leverage that to the growth and advancement of your own 240 00:13:29,840 --> 00:13:30,840 career. 241 00:13:30,840 --> 00:13:37,760 Another thing that's important is to really show them gratitude, is to show mentors gratitude. 242 00:13:37,760 --> 00:13:41,900 And it's just that, to be honest, this is something that applies to everybody, anybody 243 00:13:41,900 --> 00:13:45,320 who at any time meets with you to speak with you about your career. 244 00:13:45,320 --> 00:13:47,080 It's just to say thank you. 245 00:13:47,080 --> 00:13:48,540 It's just to say thank you. 246 00:13:48,540 --> 00:13:50,880 It's really just simple just to say thank you. 247 00:13:50,880 --> 00:13:54,080 It says, hey, I value your time. 248 00:13:54,080 --> 00:13:55,080 I value expertise. 249 00:13:55,080 --> 00:13:58,200 Thank you for taking this time to meet with me. 250 00:13:58,200 --> 00:14:02,760 And it may be that you're supporting your mentors program and your work is also moving 251 00:14:02,760 --> 00:14:05,760 their work forward, which is great. 252 00:14:05,760 --> 00:14:10,860 And I think it's just important actually that we acknowledge each other and we thank each 253 00:14:10,860 --> 00:14:16,520 other for the things we do that allow us to move forward in a big and important way. 254 00:14:16,520 --> 00:14:19,240 And anyway, so it's important. 255 00:14:19,240 --> 00:14:20,320 It's important to do these things. 256 00:14:20,320 --> 00:14:22,320 So I want to just go through these five things again. 257 00:14:22,320 --> 00:14:24,640 You want to make sure you have clear goals and expectations. 258 00:14:24,640 --> 00:14:29,240 You want to communicate effectively, honestly, openly. 259 00:14:29,240 --> 00:14:34,000 You want to be proactive and take ownership and direct your own career. 260 00:14:34,000 --> 00:14:39,400 You want to learn from their experiences and you want to show gratitude because it is so 261 00:14:39,400 --> 00:14:43,420 important that we show gratitude to people who help us move forward. 262 00:14:43,420 --> 00:14:49,000 So I say all that and I want to share with you and remind you that you are leading your 263 00:14:49,000 --> 00:14:50,000 own career. 264 00:14:50,000 --> 00:14:52,000 You absolutely are. 265 00:14:52,000 --> 00:14:55,880 And part of finding the way to make the most of your mentors is being clear about where 266 00:14:55,880 --> 00:14:57,160 you're going. 267 00:14:57,160 --> 00:14:59,960 And if you're not clear, to do the work of getting clear. 268 00:14:59,960 --> 00:15:02,320 And that's where I think a coach can be helpful. 269 00:15:02,320 --> 00:15:08,240 And if you're a clinician looking for a coach who can help you make that transition, build 270 00:15:08,240 --> 00:15:13,280 the infrastructure in your life to be able to successfully make that transition from 271 00:15:13,280 --> 00:15:17,500 clinician to clinician scientist, I would love to work with you. 272 00:15:17,500 --> 00:15:18,920 Please come work with me. 273 00:15:18,920 --> 00:15:19,920 Send me a DM. 274 00:15:19,920 --> 00:15:22,800 I'm on Facebook, Instagram and LinkedIn. 275 00:15:22,800 --> 00:15:25,080 And let me know how I can be of help to you. 276 00:15:25,080 --> 00:15:28,240 And if it makes sense for both of us, then we move forward. 277 00:15:28,240 --> 00:15:33,420 But it is important to recognize that you need to take ownership. 278 00:15:33,420 --> 00:15:37,800 Whatever is necessary to do that so that you can make the most of the mentors in your life 279 00:15:37,800 --> 00:15:40,480 is absolutely worth doing. 280 00:15:40,480 --> 00:15:43,240 Ultimately, you are responsible for your career. 281 00:15:43,240 --> 00:15:46,160 You're responsible for the choices that are made. 282 00:15:46,160 --> 00:15:50,100 Even if your mentor strongly recommends something and it doesn't work out, you are still responsible 283 00:15:50,100 --> 00:15:51,640 for the fallout. 284 00:15:51,640 --> 00:15:56,140 So definitely make use of the people that you have around you. 285 00:15:56,140 --> 00:16:02,520 And remember that you ultimately are leading your own experience and you get to you get 286 00:16:02,520 --> 00:16:03,520 to choose. 287 00:16:03,520 --> 00:16:05,120 You absolutely get to choose. 288 00:16:05,120 --> 00:16:06,120 All right. 289 00:16:06,120 --> 00:16:08,560 It has been a pleasure talking with you today. 290 00:16:08,560 --> 00:16:19,400 Thank you for taking the time to listen. 291 00:16:19,400 --> 00:16:24,720 Thanks for listening to this episode of the Clinician Researcher podcast, where academic 292 00:16:24,720 --> 00:16:30,000 clinicians learn the skills to build their own research program, whether or not they 293 00:16:30,000 --> 00:16:31,540 have a mentor. 294 00:16:31,540 --> 00:16:37,520 If you found the information in this episode to be helpful, don't keep it all to yourself. 295 00:16:37,520 --> 00:16:39,400 Someone else needs to hear it. 296 00:16:39,400 --> 00:16:43,440 So take a minute right now and share it. 297 00:16:43,440 --> 00:16:48,900 As you share this episode, you become part of our mission to help launch a new generation 298 00:16:48,900 --> 00:17:01,760 of clinician researchers who make transformative discoveries that change the way we do health