“The same thing that makes you feel safe is often what’s keeping you stuck — and for most high-achieving doctors, that ‘safe thing’ is their identity as a physician.”
Have you ever felt like you’re doing everything “right” and still not where you want to be?
You’re smart. You did the training, collected the degrees, survived residency, maybe fellowship. You know how to work hard. You know how to figure things out.
But when you look at your bank accounts, your schedule, your freedom… does it really match what you’re capable of?
For so many of us, there’s a gap between what we know is possible and what we’re actually living day to day.
That gap usually isn’t about intelligence or skill.
It’s about mindset and safety.
Lately I’ve been coming back to a simple idea:
What keeps us safe, limits us.
Why Your Brain Keeps You Safe — And Stuck
Underneath everything, our brain has one main job: keep us safe.
Safe from failing.
Safe from being judged.
Safe from uncertainty.
The catch?
Feeling “safe” often means doing exactly what you’ve always done.
Don’t rock the boat. Don’t change. Don’t risk. Stay in the familiar.
And that’s exactly what ends up holding you back.
This shows up as that quiet tug-of-war inside.
You want something different.
You know you can learn new skills.
You even know the next step you “should” take.
And yet… you don’t really move.
You stay in the job that’s burning you out.
You put off emailing your agent or checking out that next real estate deal.
You tell yourself you’ll work on your portfolio “when things calm down.”
That tension between what you want and what you’re doing is the clash between growth and safety.
The same thing that makes you feel safe is often what’s keeping you stuck.
How This Physician Mindset Shift Showed Up in My Own Life
Back in 2014, safety looked like this for me:
- A stable hospitalist job
- A predictable paycheck
- A clear identity: “I’m a doctor.”
I told myself I had reached what I’d been aiming for. And I was grateful. But I was also exhausted, restless, and quietly asking:
“Is this it?”
“Is this really my purpose?”
Being a “good doctor” kept me very safe:
- Safe from taking risks
- Safe from making a drastic change
- Safe from what people might think if I did something different
But it also boxed me in:
- It limited my time with Kenji and our family
- It capped my income and impact
- It restricted who I was “allowed” to become
Real estate investing, building businesses like Fast FIRE Capital and Beyara, moving to Puerto Rico, taking months at a time to travel with our kids—none of that fit inside the safe little box I had built for myself.
At some point, I had to tell myself the truth:
The very thing that was keeping me “safe” was also keeping me small.
What’s Keeping You Safe Right Now?
Try this on for a moment:
- The job that keeps you safe may be the same job that keeps you from spending your time the way you really want to.
- The hospital system you’re in may keep you safe with a name brand on your CV, but limit you from practicing medicine on your terms or building your own business.
- The identity of “I’m just a doctor, I’m not a business owner” keeps you safe from feeling like a beginner, but limits you from becoming an investor, entrepreneur, or CEO.
- The extra shifts you pick up to feel financially safe may be costing you the time you need to learn to invest in real estate, start your own practice, or finally launch that program you’ve been dreaming about.
- Even the city you live in can feel safe and comfortable, and at the same time keep you from exploring new markets, new opportunities, or a lifestyle you secretly crave.
None of this is “bad.”
It’s just worth looking at with clear eyes.
Because what keeps you safe might be the exact thing that’s limiting who you could become.
So how do you spot this in your own life?
How to Spot the Safety Trap in Your Own Life
Here’s a simple way to start:
- Notice where you feel a strong want or need.
“I want more time with my family.”
“I want to work less.”
“I want more financial freedom.”
“I want to invest in real estate / start a business / leave this job.” - If you’ve wanted it for a while and haven’t moved, ask:
“What ‘safe’ thing would I have to risk or change to go after this?”
It might be:- Your current job
- Your current schedule
- Your current income structure
- Your current identity (“I’m not the type of person who…”)
- Your current circle of colleagues or friends
- That “safe” thing is often the real limit.
Once you name it, you can work with it instead of letting it quietly run the show.
If you’re feeling stuck, not progressing, not where you want to be, there’s a good chance this is what’s underneath it.
So the real question becomes:
What’s been keeping you safe… and isn’t it time to change it?
Leti and Kenji
High achievers often feel stuck because their brain prioritizes safety over growth. For physicians, this shows up as staying in a familiar job, identity, or income structure — not because of lack of skill or intelligence, but because change feels unsafe. The very things that made you successful (stability, predictability, clear identity) can become the ceiling that limits what’s next.
A physician mindset shift means recognizing that your identity as a doctor — while valuable — can also box you in. When you see yourself only as “a doctor, not a business owner or investor,” you unconsciously avoid the risks required to build wealth outside of your W-2. Shifting that mindset is often the first step toward financial freedom, real estate investing, or building a business on your own terms.
A simple signal: if you’ve wanted something — more time, more income, more freedom — for a while and haven’t moved toward it, there’s likely a “safe” thing you’d have to risk or change to get there. That safe thing is often your current job, schedule, income structure, or the belief that “I’m not the type of person who invests or builds businesses.”
Start by naming it. Notice where you have a strong want — more family time, financial freedom, a different practice model — and ask yourself: “What safe thing would I have to change to go after this?” Once you can name the real limit, you can work with it intentionally instead of letting it quietly run the show.