Wired for More
A neuroscience-informed newsletter for physician leaders and the systems they hold together.
Wired for More is published twice monthly by Meriot Leadership Institute. Each issue draws on neuroscience, neuroplasticity, and the realities of high-pressure healthcare leadership to address what actually limits physician leaders and clinical teams, and what restores it.
This is not wellness content. It is strategic intelligence for CMOs, Medical Directors, Chiefs of Staff, and clinical leaders operating where the margin is thin and the cost of getting it wrong reaches far beyond any individual.
THE EXPERTISE TRAP
The most experienced physician leader in the room is often the least challenged. Over time, unchallenged judgment does not stay sharp. It narrows around the patterns that have worked before, and the system stops providing the friction that would reveal the limits. Part 2 of the Cost of Competence Series.
The Bottleneck Problem: Your best physician leader built the bottleneck without knowing it.
Your strongest physician leader is still delivering. The team is still functioning. And the system has, quietly and without anyone intending it, built a structural dependency on one person's capacity that it cannot sustain. Part 1 of the Cost of Competence Series.
The High Cost of "FINE"
In healthcare leadership, "FINE" is rarely neutral. It is a risk indicator, not a reassurance, and it is most likely to be the prevailing language among the leaders your system depends on most. Part 3 of the Wired for More SRS Framework Series.
Beyond Skills Training
Your team has been through the training. Most of it did not hold. The issue is not the content. It is what the content had to land on. Part 2 of the Wired for More SRS Framework Series.
Performance Is a Lagging Indicator
Your dashboard looks stable. Your strongest physicians are still delivering. But performance is the last thing to change, and by the time output drops, capacity has already been eroding for months. Part 1 of the Wired for More SRS Framework Series.
The Cost of Endurance
Endurance keeps systems running. Recovery keeps them healthy.
In healthcare leadership, only one of those is being systematically supported, and the cost of that gap accumulates relationally before it ever appears operationally. A special edition of Wired for More.
If Everything Is Working, Don't Assume It's Stable
Functioning and stability are not the same thing. A healthcare system can meet every target while quietly contracting at the capacity layer, and the two will not become visibly misaligned until the window for light intervention has already closed. Part 1 of the Wired for More Stability Series.
Conflict Usually Starts Before Anyone Notices
By the time conflict becomes visible in a healthcare leadership team, the system has usually been under strain for months. Most interventions address the incident. The conditions that produced it remain intact. Part 2 of the Wired for More Pressure Series.
Pressure Changes Judgement Before It Changes Behaviour
The earliest sign that a physician leader's capacity is being exceeded is not conflict or burnout. It is when decisions start to feel heavier than the situation justifies. That signal has a narrow and highly actionable window. Part 1 of the Wired for More Pressure Series.
Highly Accountable Leaders Don't Fall Apart. They Tighten.
The most misread sign of capacity erosion in physician leaders is not collapse. It is contraction. Tighter control, less delegation, or quiet withdrawal. Each is a nervous system response to a deficit the organization has not yet named. Part 2 of the Wired for More Capacity Series.
When Capacity Is Gone, Leadership Becomes Expensive
Burnout does not remove skill. It removes access to it. A physician leader who is technically delivering but doing so on a margin so thin that any additional load tips the system is not a development opportunity. They are a predictable risk. Part 1 of the Wired for More Capacity Series.
When Availability Becomes Identity: The Cost of Always Being On
When availability becomes identity, every limit feels like a character statement. The physician leader who is accessible to everyone has often become invisible to themselves, and the cost extends beyond the individual. The concluding issue of the Wired for More Boundaries Series.
When Boundaries Feel Misaligned with Professionalism
For physician leaders, protecting capacity does not just feel difficult. It feels professionally misaligned. That friction is not a perception problem -- it is the output of an identity built around unconditional availability. Part 3 of the Wired for More Boundaries Series.
Leading Without the Mask: Authentic Leadership for Physicians
The composure that built a physician leader's career can become a cage. When the mask that was built for protection starts to function as isolation, the cost is not only personal. It reaches the team and the system. A special edition of Wired for More.
Why Saying No Triggers Shame in Medicine
The hardest part of holding a limit is not the limit. It is the shame response that arrives before the logic does. Capacity protection is a leadership skill the training system spent years making feel like a liability. Part 2 of the Wired for More Boundaries Series.
Rewiring Visibility: Leading Without the Fear Filter
Physician leaders who have earned authority still hesitate to use it. The filter is not modesty -- it is a threat response built during training and still running in the leadership role. Part 1 of the Wired for More Boundaries Series.
The Reward Loop: Why You Can't Stop Working Even When You've Won
The physician leader who reaches the goal and feels nothing has not achieved the wrong things. Their reward circuitry has been desensitized by the same conditions that built their career. The loop is neurological, not motivational. Part 2 of the Wired for More Perfectionism Series.
I'll Rest When It's Done: The Physician's Perfectionism Loop
Physician leaders are not burning out from the work. They are burning out from what the work is being used to prove. The perfectionism loop does not close because it was never designed to. Part 1 of the Wired for More Perfectionism Series.
When Disruptive Behaviour Goes Unchecked
The label arrives quickly: disruptive, difficult, unprofessional.
The behaviour gets managed. The conflict resurfaces.
Until the intervention reaches the level where the pattern lives, the cycle continues. A special edition of Wired for More on what effective intervention actually requires.
Carrying It All: The Silent Load Behind High Performance
What looks like composure in a physician leader is often emotional isolation dressed as professionalism. The system rewards the output and has no framework for the cost of carrying it alone. A special edition of Wired for More.