From Cadaver Lab to Breaking Bad News: What Medical Training Really Teaches You
We started medical school by walking into a room with donated human bodies and a scalpel. And if you ask most doctors about it now, years later, there's this thing that happens — the memory is still vivid, but the weight of it has somehow… shifted. This episode is about that shift.
Faith and Isaac talk through what cadaver lab was actually like — the smell, the pledge, the strange intimacy of returning to the same silent mentor week after week. But what starts in that room doesn't stay there. From the first time you realise you're treating someone's worst day like a Tuesday, to the 4am calls where you have to find enough human warmth to deliver devastating news on barely any sleep — the emotional recalibration that comes with working in medicine is something nobody really prepares you for.
They get into patients rejecting life-saving dialysis, dark humour as a coping mechanism, what it means to "pace" with a dying patient's family, and what the best and worst examples of clinical communication have taught them about who they want to become.
By the end of it, the question isn't really whether doctors are desensitised. It's whether some version of that numbness is necessary — and whether, if you're honest with yourself, it's started showing up in places it probably shouldn't.
⏳Chapters
0:00 - Intro & what this episode is about
0:58 - What actually happens in cadaver lab (for non-medical viewers)
2:45 - Our first day: the pledge, the white coats, and the moment the bodies were unveiled
5:00 - The difference between Faith's experience and Isaac's (dissecting vs. observing)
6:20 - Developing a "relationship" with your silent mentor over weeks
7:05 - How that emotional weight slowly evolves as you start seeing real patients
9:45 - The first time you start feeling like you're becoming someone you don't like
12:00 - Dialysis, difficult conversations, and learning what pacing with patients means
15:00 - The overnight call that made it feel real: a stroke patient our own age
16:00 - Processing heavier conversations — and why 10 seconds is sometimes all you get
18:45 - Did med school actually prepare us for any of this?
22:30 - Staying up overnight to practice breaking bad news at 5am (our proposal to faculty)
24:00 - Desensitisation and colleagues: dark humour, "rocks," and what outsiders don't get
26:00 - Code-switching: from hospital to real life (and the velvet glove problem)
27:30 - When a senior doctor loses it — and what that taught us about who we want to be
30:10 - How numb are we, really? (Isaac's answer: 80%)
32:00 - "Microdosing emotion": what the best seniors actually do
34:00 - SBAR: when clinical communication becomes your default personality
36:00 - Does the numbness follow you home? The paternalism trap
37:00 - Patient stories that stuck: the man who refused dialysis
38:30 - The "pleasantly confused" auntie who gave us Korean hearts — and then didn't make it
41:00 - Closing thoughts: striking the balance between empathy and function