What clinicians can learn from a conversation with Nic Lucas
There was a moment in my conversation with Nic Lucas where I realised this wasn’t really a podcast episode about neuroscience.
It was a conversation about permission.
Permission to think differently.
Permission to evolve.
Permission to stop allowing our profession to become our entire identity.
And honestly?
I think healthcare desperately needs more of that.
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The clinician identity trap
Many health professionals don’t realise how deeply their identity has fused with their profession until something disrupts it.
Burnout.
Illness.
Redundancy.
Motherhood.
A regulatory complaint.
Chronic pain.
A desire for something more.
Or simply the quiet awareness that:
“I can’t keep doing this the same way forever.”
In the episode, Nic shared something that struck me deeply:
“I was never an osteopath. I was always Nic.”
That sentence stopped me.
Because so many clinicians have been conditioned to introduce themselves through their title first:
- I’m an OT
- I’m a psychologist
- I’m a physiotherapist
- I’m a rehab counsellor
- I’m a nurse
But what happens when the profession changes?
Or your capacity changes?
Or your interests evolve?
Or your nervous system simply says:
“I can’t do this the old way anymore.”
Who are you then?
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Curiosity may be one of the most important professional skills of the future
Nic described reading about a single neuron being separated and placed into a petri dish.
The neuron explored.
It moved.
It searched.
It investigated its environment.
And Nic used that as a metaphor for humans:
we are wired for curiosity.
Not rigidity.
Not stagnation.
Not staying trapped in one identity forever.
Curiosity is what allows clinicians to:
- innovate
- adapt
- evolve
- question systems
- rethink care
- build new models
- and create solutions that didn’t exist before
Yet many clinicians have been trained to prioritise certainty over curiosity.
That becomes a problem in a rapidly changing world.
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Healthcare is changing faster than many workplaces can tolerate
Ten years ago:
- we didn’t know COVID existed
- AI wasn’t integrated into everyday workflow
- telehealth was niche
- neurotechnology was far less accessible
- conversations about psychosocial risk were barely entering mainstream healthcare leadership
Now?
Everything is changing simultaneously.
And many workplaces still operate with the assumption that:
- hierarchy equals wisdom
- experience automatically equals adaptability
- and younger clinicians should simply “fit in”
I don’t think that’s going to work much longer.
As Nic pointed out during the conversation, we now have emerging generations of clinicians who are far less willing to tolerate:
- poor work design
- identity enmeshment with work
- rigid systems
- and leadership structures that discourage questioning
That cultural shift is already happening.
The organisations that survive will be the ones willing to understand it.
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The Human Connectome Project changed how we understand the brain
One of the most fascinating parts of this conversation was Nic explaining the Human Connectome Project.
Rather than viewing the brain as isolated little regions with separate functions, researchers began mapping the networks connecting the brain together.
The findings?
Every brain is uniquely wired.
Not metaphorically.
Literally.
Which means:
the idea that humans all process stress, pain, leadership, communication, learning and emotion in exactly the same way becomes increasingly difficult to defend.
And honestly, I think that matters enormously in healthcare.
Because so many systems still assume:
- one-size-fits-all leadership
- standardised productivity expectations
- identical recovery pathways
- and rigid workplace structures
Meanwhile clinicians are quietly burning out trying to force themselves into environments their nervous systems cannot sustainably tolerate.
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This is not just about mindset
One of the most important distinctions Nic made was this:
His work is not primarily mindset work.
It is brain-based work.
That distinction matters.
Because healthcare — and honestly the self-development industry too — often reduces human struggle to:
- motivation
- mindset
- discipline
- resilience
- positive thinking
Meanwhile many people are dealing with:
- neurological overload
- chronic stress activation
- executive functioning fatigue
- nervous system dysregulation
- pain sensitisation
- cognitive exhaustion
Those are not moral failures.
And they cannot always be solved through “trying harder.”
As someone living with a chronic neurological condition myself, I found this part of the conversation deeply validating.
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Innovation requires both curiosity and rigor
One thing I deeply respect about Nic is that while he is extraordinarily curious, he is equally committed to scientific rigor.
He spoke openly about the importance of:
- validated outcome measures
- evidence-based assessment
- questioning assumptions
- and not becoming seduced by hype or illusion
That tension matters.
Because healthcare needs innovators.
But it also needs innovators who understand responsibility.
The future of healthcare cannot be built on:
- ego
- magical thinking
- or charisma alone
It needs thoughtful clinicians who are willing to:
- question systems
- test ideas
- gather evidence
- and remain intellectually honest
Even when the answer is:
“That didn’t work.”
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Maybe self-awareness is becoming a professional necessity
Toward the end of the conversation, we spoke about AI.
And honestly?
I think this may become one of the defining professional conversations of the next decade.
Because when information becomes increasingly automated, one of the most valuable remaining human skills may become:
- self-awareness
- discernment
- emotional regulation
- contextual thinking
- and relational intelligence
In other words:
understanding your own brain may become one of the most important professional advantages you can develop.
Not just for performance.
But for sustainability.
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Final thoughts
This conversation with Nic Lucas reminded me that being entrepreneurial is not fundamentally about business.
It’s about curiosity.
It’s about being willing to ask:
- What else might be possible?
- Is there another way?
- What if the system is incomplete?
- What if my title is not my identity?
- What if my brain works differently than I was taught to believe?
And perhaps most importantly:
What permission have I not yet given myself?
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