The Things Not Named — with Damon Tweedy
Thank you Kae [https://substack.com/profile/22585173-kae], Lori [https://substack.com/profile/5669451-lori], Michelle Ray [https://substack.com/profile/329206267-michelle-ray], and many others for tuning into my live video with Damon Tweedy [https://substack.com/profile/182153959-damon-tweedy]!
Damon Tweedy Bio:
Dr. Damon Tweedy, is a psychiatrist, author, and leading voice on race, medicine, and mental health. He’s a professor of psychiatry at Duke University School of Medicine and a staff psychiatrist with the Durham Veterans Affairs Health System, where he co-leads an integrated primary care mental health team. A graduate of Duke School of Medicine, he also earned a law degree from Yale Law School, focusing on health policy and medical ethics before returning to Duke to complete his psychiatric training. Dr. Tweedy is the bestselling author of Black Man in a White Coat [https://bookshop.org/p/books/black-man-in-a-white-coat-a-doctor-s-reflections-on-race-and-medicine-damon-tweedy/8395478], which takes a hard look at racism and American medicine. The book was a New York Times bestseller and was named a top nonfiction book of the year by Time Magazine. His latest book, Facing the Unseen [https://bookshop.org/p/books/facing-the-unseen-the-struggle-to-center-mental-health-in-medicine-damon-tweedy-m-d/ca86d29cc0c00b35?ean=9781250284891&next=t], explores the struggle to center mental health within medicine and was recognized by Nature as one of the best science books of 2024.
The full transcript is available below.
Transcript:
Joshua Dolezal:
Welcome back to The Things Not Named [https://podcasts.apple.com/ca/podcast/the-things-not-named/id1795513589]. I’m Joshua Dolezal, and my series this year is based on one of Willa Cather’s famous passages. She said that it’s the presence of the thing not named that gives high quality to fiction, drama, and poetry. And so for my series this year on the medical humanities, I’m applying that principle to how we might all be more attentive to what goes unsaid in the clinic, in popular culture, and in the experience of illness from the patient’s side.
My guest today is Dr. Damon Tweedy, psychiatrist, author, and leading voice on race, medicine, and mental health. He’s a professor of psychiatry at Duke University School of Medicine and a staff psychiatrist with the Durham Veterans Affairs Health System, where he co-leads an integrated primary care mental health team. A graduate of Duke School of Medicine, he also earned a law degree from Yale Law School, focusing on health policy and medical ethics before returning to Duke to complete his psychiatric training. Dr. Tweedy is the bestselling author of Black Man in a White Coat, which takes a hard look at racism and American medicine. The book was a New York Times bestseller and was named a top nonfiction book of the year by Time Magazine. His latest book, Facing the Unseen, explores the struggle to center mental health within medicine and was recognized by Nature as one of the best science books of 2024.
So thanks for joining me, Dr. Tweedy.
Damon Tweedy:
Yeah, it’s a pleasure.
Joshua Dolezal:
So Damon, maybe we can start with your family origins. If I’m not mistaken, you and I are both first-gen college students. So it was kind of a long road that you took from where you were born and raised to Duke and then also to Yale.
Damon Tweedy:
Yeah, so, you know, growing up, it didn’t feel that way. But now, looking back — I’m 51, almost 52 — it does feel like, yeah, you know, it was quite a journey. So I grew up in a two-parent home, mom and dad, both of whom traced their families back to America’s origins, right? Back through segregation, even back to slavery — because I have an 1860 census my dad showed me of some of his relatives. And so they grew up from Southern Virginia, grew up during the time of segregation. My parents are still living, they’re elderly now, and literally, you know, the things that we read about in textbooks were their lived experience. The Civil Rights Movement came to them when they were in their early 20s. So their whole first 20 years were in that space. And so that undoubtedly impacted how they experienced the world, see the world.
And so for me, I grew up — so my dad worked in a grocery store, a food store. Mom worked in a sort of government, kind of administrative secretarial type work. And I had an older brother and we were in a community that was all Black, literally 100% Black, a very working-class sort of Black community outside of Washington, D.C.
Back in those days, busing was still around. And so we were bused to a neighboring district that was all white. And so those are probably my first earliest kind of signs of, okay, you’re different. And what do people make of you by being different?
And so for me, that difference was that, you know, I was kind of really into math and numbers — I was sort of an odd kid in that way, really into that. So I excelled in math, but I was also one of the Black kids bused to a school that was all white. And there were a lot of perceptions among teachers there about the Black students not being capable or being somehow, you know, a problem — things that we sort of all hear about. And so for me, I was finding myself in a space where, at the same time, I was a top student. And so people didn’t know what to make of me — the teachers and sometimes my classmates — because there were all these perceptions about what it meant to be a Black person, you know, largely negative, right? And so I experienced that sort of duality at a very early age.
When I got to high school, my middle school was a local Black neighborhood school, but then I tested into a magnet program in high school. Little did I know at the time how powerful a school it was in terms of some of the people who went there and what they achieved. But it was a magnet school that was pretty much all white and Asian within a school that was otherwise Black. And so I was in these magnet classes with white and Asian students, but the rest of the school was mostly Black. And there was always this sort of tension between — where do I fit in in these two worlds?
And so that was sort of a common theme, and it played out in a lot of really kind of crazy ways. One story I can tell real quick that will encapsulate this. In high school, in 10th grade, I was in a chemistry class — literally the only Black student in a class of 30 students. And one day, our school was a school of excellence, and so they brought in several leading politicians to sort of talk about our tech program and how great it was. And so at that time — given my age — this was Governor Bill Clinton before he was president, and several people across both parties. And they sort of took them around our school to the tech programs. So here I am, the only Black student in that class. And before they get to our particular classroom, there’s suddenly four or five other Black kids in the class who are just sort of there, positioned. And then you see where I’m going with this? And then suddenly, as soon as these political people leave, those kids are just kind of told to leave. And so I’m back here as the only Black student in the class. And I’m looking around like, what the hell just happened? And no one had any reaction. It was like no one else seemed to get what had just taken place.
And that sort of in some ways encapsulated my perspective of being different, you know, and having to navigate two worlds. So my first book sort of starts with me being a medical student, but that’s sort of the backdrop to that. And so when you get to medical school at a place like Duke, that’s just accentuated — that whole idea of two worlds. The world of the doctors, you know, mostly white and Asian. Then there’s the world of patients and the community that you’re around, which is largely Black. And how do you navigate those two worlds? And so that was sort of the tension that I experienced at a young age, but it just really was accelerated in a medical setting.
Because for me, you know, part of what attracted me to medicine was the idea that it was objective, that it was concrete. It was data-driven. You know, it doesn’t matter what you look like on the outside. A bone is a bone. A blood vessel is a blood vessel. And so that’s part of what appealed to me. It’s like I could contribute to society, but in a very concrete way. And so it was really kind of a shock to the system to get into medicine and realize that it was sort of in some ways the same old thing in terms of those problems that I’d experienced as a young person.
Joshua Dolezal:
Yeah. One of the philosophers that I used in my dissertation was Helen Longino, whose iconic book is called Science as Social Knowledge, kind of questioning this idea that science is just objective because it always takes place in a context that is social, and that certain questions get privileged and certain research gets funded and all of that.
We’re the same age. So I remember Clinton when I was in high school and all of that.
Two questions came up as you were telling a little bit of that story. One — you said that you tested into this program. I know that recently there’s been some debate about whether standardized tests are actually exclusionary, whether they set arbitrary barriers for diversity in college. And I know during COVID, a lot of those standards were just taken away. And yet I’ve heard other writers talk about this — Thomas Chatterton Williams is another one who felt like standardized testing was the only way that he got noticed at all, that he would have been lost in the cracks if it hadn’t been for some kind of merit-based way of breaking through. So I’m curious what your thoughts are on that, whether standardized testing is actually a way of bringing more diverse voices into medicine or whether it’s been kind of exclusionary.
Damon Tweedy:
I think it’s a mixed picture. I think it depends on how you use it. I think that if it’s used — like, a number in and of itself — it has to be — it’s going to sound crazy to some people, but a number has to almost be contextualized. Like, if you take, let’s say, an SAT score — let’s just say 1,200, right? Now, 1,200, depending on what your background is leading up to that place, that could be a not-so-good score, that could be an exceptional score, depending on what your background is and what you sort of had to overcome and deal with.
So you think about my situation. First, you know, parents did not go to college. Despite my mom’s best efforts, I was sort of like anti — you couldn’t get me to read a book. I was kind of anti-intellectual, because that was sort of what was cool, and that was sort of the internalized message as a Black person — that these books you’re learning about in school, about 18th century England, that’s not for you, so why even bother? And so in some ways you’re kind of — it’s easy to sort of go down that path. And so you think about me getting a score like that. You know, given my background, that score may show a lot of potential. But if you compare it to someone who has had all the tutoring and — I was even told when I was in middle school and early high school that you couldn’t even study for the SAT. Like, I was like, really? I mean, looking back now, I think, really? People told me that? But that’s what I was actually told. Obviously there’s a whole testing industry that would prove otherwise.
And so if you compare people — again, the score in isolation — if you’re comparing someone like me with that score to someone who has had a much more privileged background, and putting us on the same footing, then I would say no, that’s not great. But if you sort of contextualize that person — what is that person’s distance traveled to get to this place? Then I think the scores could be potentially very useful. So again, it’s all about how you choose to use it. But if you just use it as a blanket number and say this is your value, then no, I think it could be more harmful than good.
Joshua Dolezal:
I heard Scott Galloway talking about that — you know, that it used to be that you could be kind of average and then get into an environment where you could become exceptional over time. But a lot of elite universities now seem to screen for these superhumans that are already superhuman at age 17. And yeah, it’s a problem.
The second question from your background — you’d mentioned feeling kind of caught between two worlds. You didn’t know quite where you fit. And there’s a saying about comedians, right? That they’re all damaged people. And I think there’s a similar saying about memoirists, which is that we felt dislocated or marginalized somehow, and that we try to write our way back into normalcy. I don’t know if that is true for you — that the impetus to write your first book came from that sense of wanting to bridge the two worlds. Is that accurate?
Damon Tweedy:
I never heard that exact saying. I heard about comedians, but not about memoirs. But I will say, it was an effort to make sense of what I’d experienced. Like, I would have an experience — it all started — writing not even with the intent that I would one day be writing a book for a public audience. It was more about writing for my own sense of like, how do I make sense of this experience internally. You know, I spent eight weeks in a hospital setting — again, patients often all Black, staff the opposite. I’m the only Black person in it. I would always find myself caught in these two different kinds of spaces and not having — as I put in the book — one foot in both worlds but not two feet in either. A sort of dislocation. And so it was kind of just a way to make sense of what I was experiencing initially. That’s how it all kind of really got started.
And then as I began to write a little bit more, I began to realize that there were aspects of what I was writing about that other people could connect with. And then it just sort of built upon — often Black people, but even beyond that, because in so many ways, as you learn, there are so many ways in which someone can be othered, right? And I was able to feel like I could connect with people in other ways as well. So that’s sort of how it kind of all sort of evolved. But it started as something to make sense for myself.
Joshua Dolezal:
I had the pleasure of teaching Black Man in a White Coat. I used to be an English professor in Iowa before I pivoted to independent writing and podcasting, but I loved teaching it, and students resonated with a lot of your stories and learned a lot. They appreciated the research that you brought to it and the historical perspective. What really struck a lot of them was the opening, so I wanted to talk about that first scene that really hooks the premise. And I’d like to also maybe get into some of your influences — people that shaped you as you were writing this or models that you had for the book — because the book doesn’t come out of nowhere. You join a conversation about what it’s like to be a doctor and there’s a great body of literature on that already.
Damon Tweedy:
Yeah, so, you know, just to quickly start that last point. As I got into medical school and once I was there, I started getting interested in stories. Like, it was fascinating to me that, you know, in some ways a story — like a doctor could write a 750-word essay about an experience in a clinic with a patient, and you could learn so much from that. And it was a sort of way you could connect to that. And I found it ultimately became more interesting in some ways than, say, the latest New England Journal study comparing this drug to this placebo. And it was like, wow, these stories are fascinating.
But what I noticed — and there were many books, many writers who were really successful, and I drew on many of them, I have a whole library of books over here that’s nothing but medical memoirs in one row — what I thought I brought to the table, looking back, is that those stories were set in big cities often, but there wasn’t that dynamic of what is it like to be a Black person, given our country’s history, to be in these same rooms? And what were the tensions between patient and doctor that maybe someone who is not Black and didn’t have my experience growing up could sort of understand? So that’s sort of how the book situates within that literature of medical memoirs.
But as for that opening story — so I’ve already kind of laid out for you some of the dislocation I felt and how medical school would start to be this space in which I could kind of escape that. I initially started medical school thinking I’d become a cardiologist or an orthopedic surgeon — very, from my mind, very concrete, objective enterprises, you know, a blood vessel is a blood vessel, a bone is a bone, right? And that was sort of how I was thinking about medical school when I started.
So in the background, of course, in the mid-90s, Affirmative Action was — there was an earlier attack. There’s always been attacks on it, right? There’s always, you know, history repeats itself. So there was always a sense of, you know, you’re in this place like Duke — man, do I really belong here? You know, my parents didn’t go to college. I’m a Black guy here. This guy next to me, his dad’s the dean of this law school. This guy’s mom owns a company. They’re driving Mercedes to school and like, man, you know, I don’t belong here. Right? And they’ve all gone to Ivy League schools, Princeton and whatnot. And so what am I doing here? So there was always that there.
And then there was this early day, first few weeks of med school, where basically I leave the classroom for a break, come back between lectures, and the professor confronts me in the room and says, “Sir, are you here to fix the lights in the room?” And I’m looking around like, who’s he looking at? He’s looking at me. And I’m like, well, no. And he’s like, “Yeah, but I mean, I called about this last week. Why haven’t you done it?” He sort of got irritable about it. And he really kind of doubled down. I’m like, whoa, what’s happening here? Why is it me? And I’m not someone who wants to just jump to the idea that race is always the reason why someone treats you a certain way. But I couldn’t come to anything else. It’s like, wait, why else — I’m dressed the same, everything’s the same as everyone else except the obvious, right? And so I was like, man. It always comes back to this.
And so how do you deal with that? I’m a really big, tall guy. Am I going to come back with anger? Is that going to — how is it going to be received? Am I going to be some, you know, angry Black guy who’s looking to make everything a problem? And this guy was small — so I could visualize how that could have gone south so quickly. And so what do you do? I mean, just based on life experience, that could have gone south really quickly. And so you kind of retreat and you’re like, man, this guy thinks I don’t belong here, right? So I had to — it was like a test for me. Do I belong here? And so I really kind of internally just — maybe he’s right. Maybe all these things are true. And so I just really kind of tapped into something I didn’t know I necessarily had at that point in my life, where I doubled down and I studied like hours around the clock, basically, almost literally. Ended up at the very end getting one of the highest grades in the class.
And the way it worked back then is that you would meet with the professor at the end of the course. And then it was a weird thing because, you know, I knew that at this point I’d done well. But then the professor — when he saw my score and he saw me — he did this double take and started getting nervous and stumbling. And it was weird because it was like in some ways I vindicated myself. I’d shown him — I stuck it to him, if you will. But at the same time, it was like, you know, I’m different, right? And people are going to see me differently. And no matter how much I just want to be like everyone else, I just want to be a medical student — I have to navigate this reality that people will see me differently. And I have to figure out how to make that work. And so that was sort of the opening salvo to that journey.
Joshua Dolezal:
And he, as I recall from the book, offered you a chance to join his research team, and he wanted to be part of that.
Damon Tweedy:
It was like a patronizing kind of thing, right? Because I think he remembered the first encounter in retrospect, and I think it was just so awkward. And it was like, no, we just need to move forward.
Joshua Dolezal:
What you’re describing — being seen a certain way by professors — it didn’t stop once you started practicing. And one thing I love about memoir writing and your book in particular is that our lives happen to us in chronological order, but we don’t have to tell everything that way in a memoir. We can choose how we’re going to order things. And so sometimes the way you place two stories side by side is enlightening. And in this case, you had a self-admitted white supremacist named Chester, and then in the same chapter you had a Black man named Robert. And neither one of them wanted you as their doctor. That was a really interesting contrast — for both of them, coming from very different backgrounds, to draw the same conclusion. So why did you juxtapose them like that in the same chapter? And what did you learn from that?
Damon Tweedy:
At that point in the book, I’m an intern, a medical intern, which is the — people have probably seen TV shows — busiest year in a doctor’s life, you know, all those stories about interns. And so, yeah, you just want to be dealing with all these other challenges: the 3 a.m. call, you know, the heart attack in the room, whatever. And so you’re dealing with — can you cut it, right? And so that’s the context of every intern. And so in some ways, it’s extremely stressful. And you want to feel like you’re just like every other doctor, but then these things happen and you’re reminded you’re different.
So one is that you have a white supremacist patient and his family who sort of embodied all that. And I saw all these Confederate flag tattoos and outfits and inward slurs and all that. And you’re like, whoa, obviously they didn’t want me to be a doctor, right? And then — but the irony was that I was the only Black doctor of that whole sort of medical team, like 20, 30 doctors, only Black person there. And so I’m the one who gets assigned to this white supremacist.
And then in that same year, I had another patient — the Black patient you talked about — who had internalized that Black people were less, you know, successful, right? Less, were inferior in some way. So he’s like, I didn’t come to Duke to see a Black doctor. I came to see, you know, this Jewish doctor, this Asian doctor — all the stereotypes that sort of kind of come in there. I didn’t come to see a Black doctor. Why are you trying to give me inferior care? And so it’s like, wow. And so it just shows how deep that cuts, right? It shows how deeply the racism cuts into how people perceive a Black person in a white coat, in so many ways.
And so what I had to do — you know, I always kind of circle back to the idea of what do you do with that? Anger is always what you feel first. Defensiveness — that’s the natural reaction. But is that going to get me anywhere, or is that going to just make things worse? And that’s always the thing that I’ve had to kind of navigate, right? There’s a downside to that — we’ll maybe get to that later. But I’ve sort of been able to navigate that anger by not expressing it and trying — I’m going to prove someone wrong, right? I’m going to just show them how competent I am. And that’s sort of been my approach to things.
And in both cases — I mean, I guess I don’t want to give it all away — but in both cases, I was able to sort of overcome tremendous obstacles, and to have both people agree to have me successfully treat them as their doctor. But it did come at a cost, right? I mean, so on one hand, that’s a great story. I was able to overcome racism and do the good, right? But I think the downside is that, you know, for me to internalize all that — I think it actually impacted my health, right? Physically. And now I’m a psychiatrist and I think about the mind and the body and how much they are intertwined. And so when I was in my twenties, in that era, during that period of life, I had significantly elevated blood pressure that I only kind of later unpacked. And I had high blood pressure, and I also went to a doctor and they told me I had some early signs of kidney-related problems, which were related to high blood pressure.
So you think about those things that I was experiencing — and now I’m much older and those problems have gone away. But I think what was happening was that I was internalizing that stress, and it was showing up in that way. So I think there’s a cost to what I did. But looking back, I think I also still did the best thing that I could in those situations.
Joshua Dolezal:
Yeah. You’re making me wonder — and I’ve talked about this with other guests too — whether writing is an underreported way of releasing some of your experiences as a doctor. And this is my pet peeve: that always gets framed as a kind of catharsis — you know, you just sort of let it all out. But I think the real healing that writing offers is that you get to reframe things, you get to make sense of things, you get to shape them meaningfully. So what I love about Black Man in a White Coat is you’re not just telling these stories — you’re capturing a moment when you’re immersed in the confusion and the anger, and that’s your voice of innocence sort of in the moment. But then you come back with the voice of experience and layer over some insight. And in that case, you said you had sort of pegged this guy Chester, the white supremacist, as less than you. You know, you’d sort of absorbed all these attitudes about “white trash,” you know, Confederate flag. Trailer parks, you know.
Damon Tweedy:
Yeah, exactly. Yeah, yeah.
Joshua Dolezal:
So when you’re writing about something and you’re releasing the stressful part of it, but also layering over a kind of insight about yourself that you’ve gleaned — to me, that’s where the real power of writing comes out.
Damon Tweedy:
No, I agree. And I think also in both those stories, it also shows, you know, because not only did I make change, but they were able to make change, these patients, right? So I think it also makes us think about — it can also address a sense of hopelessness that people can’t ever, you know, change or improve or be better than where they are. And I think those stories also can shed light on that, right, as well.
You know, so much of our world is framed by — someone always says, you don’t know what you don’t know. And you think about this — this may be a broader topic — but you think about how Black people have often been framed, right? And you think about the ways by media, by different stories and things of that sort, and how we all kind of ingest that, Black or white, or otherwise. And there’s a certain poison to that. So what my book hoped to do is — how do we continue to challenge that? How do we continue to help people get to, you know, see the better side of themselves? Because so much of this, the default can be the negative. And so that was one of the other things that I thought these stories also helped with. Not only for me, but also showing how other people beyond me can grow. So it wasn’t just about my own growth. It was about how others can grow as well.
Joshua Dolezal:
Absolutely. I want to shift to Facing the Unseen, your second book, which begins with a surprising premise — that you had all these other options open to you, had this prestigious law degree, you could have made a bunch of money as a surgeon, but you instead chose psychiatry. And you seem to have this kind of thesis in the book that mental health care gets kind of shunted off to the side, it’s marginalized from general medicine, and that really what should happen for everyone’s sake is a kind of integration of the two. So tell us a little more about how you came to write that book and what was different about it from Black Man in a White Coat.
Damon Tweedy:
Let me start with what’s similar. So the title of the book is inspired to some degree by a quote from James Baldwin from back in the ‘60s — an essay in the New York Times where he says something to the effect of — I always kind of butcher it — but basically he’s talking about the state of the civil rights movement and how we can move forward. And he says something to the effect of, you know, not everything that is faced can be changed, but nothing can be changed until it is faced. You know, the idea that we can’t change the fact that there was segregation, there was slavery, but how do we move forward? We have to take an honest reckoning, an honest look at how they impact us today.
And so I think there are a lot of parallels — now he’s talking about race and civil rights, but I think if people look back 40, 50 years from now, they’ll wonder about some of our treatment of mental illness and mental health, and they will see real parallels. Because some of the things that happened then — for instance, you know, back in the ‘40s, ‘50s, there were separate hospitals, right? And Black people were literally denied care. Honestly, one thing I didn’t tell you is that I actually did — there’s a podcast called Unhealed [https://trentcenter.duke.edu/unhealed-podcast] that my colleagues and I did at Duke where we talk about a story from Duke during that time. I should have sent it to you ahead of time. It’s a really interesting story. But it talks about — so that was the past, right? They literally had segregated hospitals, people being denied care.
Nowadays, that happens in mental health, where people will come to a hospital, to an emergency department, and if the issue is identified as a mental health problem, they have to be sent somewhere else, right? And often hours and hours away to inferior settings. I think there are real parallels. And so that’s sort of what I say is the similarity. And that’s sort of how it kind of came to me to think about — because the first book is exploring how race puts people as an other. But I think the second book is more about how mental illness and mental health is an othering factor.
I started my medical school clinical year. I started in surgery, which was at the main hospital. And you think about surgery, medicine, ER. My second rotation was in family medicine, primary care in a regular setting. My third rotation was in psychiatry. And so for the psych rotation, they put us into a state hospital 30 minutes away from everything else, which is already separate. And when you drive to that hospital, you would pass signs for a federal prison, a juvenile detention facility. And you think about this — think about how you’ve already sort of separated out mental illness as something completely different, even in that geographic and sort of symbolic, metaphorical way. And so that’s sort of your introduction to psychiatry for many people. And I think it already sets it off as a very different sort of thing that you’re engaging with.
So that was sort of the frame. And that’s sort of how it all started. And I think that persists through training. But then as you get further through training, you realize how much the two overlap — mental health and physical health are intertwined. But that’s not how you’re taught. You’re taught that they’re totally two different things. And that comes out as harm to patients and doctors, as I talk about in the book.
Joshua Dolezal:
And there is an aspect to mental illness that’s just scarier than other kinds of disease. You know, if somebody comes in with a broken leg, you’re not dealing with the same kind of behaviors that are — “abnormal” is a kind of loaded term, right? But, you know, it can be frightening. And you kind of face that with one of your friends or acquaintances, the guy you played basketball with. So tell us about Scott and why that was so unnerving for you early in that rotation.
Damon Tweedy:
So once again, people should know — I went to med school to become a surgeon or a cardiologist. I am very much in that medical model. I actually looked down on psychiatrists, like, why would anyone do that? And so that was my sort of — and a lot of people, that’s how a lot of people sort of came to it. And it got reinforced with the way we were taught in med school. So in my intern year, I’m on the path in general medicine to become a cardiologist. That’s the path I’m on.
And so one day we get a call to come to the ER, and there’s a young man who’s acting strange. And they said acting crazy. And so the way that works in medical settings is you have to make sure that you’re not missing something else. So if you’re on a medical team and someone’s acting strange behaviorally, you want to make sure there’s nothing underlying that’s causing it. Like, do they have some kind of infection or some kind of, you know, cancer, something that can explain this behavior? You want to make sure that you’re not missing something medically. And so my goal was to come down there and do that medical evaluation and then send them to psychiatry if everything turned out normal.
So I’d done that before. But on this particular day, I go down to the emergency department, and I see the person I’m supposed to evaluate, and I just stop in my tracks because it’s like somebody that I recognize — someone I’d known years earlier. He was an undergraduate student. We’d played pickup basketball and done a lot of, you know, bonding over that. He was a really smart guy. He wanted to become a lawyer, politician, etc. Really bright guy. And so, you know, I’d seen him one way, and now he’s in a state where he’s like basically manic and disheveled, and like — who is this person?
And so I think that really speaks to the idea — when we think about mental illness, as you just said earlier, it can be an us-versus-them aspect to it. The “us” is the land of normal people, as we might want to think of ourselves — people who sort of can conduct ourselves in a normal way. The “them” are people at those facilities, like at a state hospital, or homeless people. That’s the “them.” And so we have this sort of separation. And so for me to see someone that I know in one way, as an “us,” now as a “them” — it was like, whoa, what is happening? How can this be? Because when you see someone at a state hospital, by the time you’ve seen them, they’ve already been in that “them” state for so long, you can divorce the idea that that person may not have always been that way, right? Or that there are people in their world that care about them. In that way, it’s easy to sort of separate yourself from all of that. And I think that’s part of what happens in our society to a large degree.
And so when I called Scott’s mom, that was really jarring. I didn’t know her before, but just to call her — because what you find is that when people have those issues, a mental health issue, people want it to be anything else because that’s so frightening. It’s so scary. Like, could it be anything else? Could it be cancer? But you want to hold onto something that’s tangible. And that’s what you see. And so that’s what I saw in that experience with Scott. It was really just a totally mind-bending experience for me. Coming from a world where I didn’t think about mental illness as a real thing. It was a mind-bending experience to sort of see that up close. And then having a personal connection made it more complicated because then he’s paranoid that you’re kind of manipulating your connection with him to sort of sell him out to somebody else.
Joshua Dolezal:
Yes. So that dynamic — can you be a patient’s friend, or does that actually harm the care you give them? — kind of comes up there.
Damon Tweedy:
Yeah, it was very complicated. Yeah, for sure. Because he’s like, man, you’re part of it. Because, you know, he was paranoid — they brought me in as part of the conspiracy to prove that he was crazy. Yeah, that was sort of his thing. And it was really difficult. And it was a very emotional experience to sort of see that. But it made me think about it in a different way. And as I began to go back onto the medical units, I began to see how pervasive it was. You know, there were people I was seeing all the time who had, quote, medical issues, right? But there was a mental health issue that was either the cause of it or was making it a lot worse. And that’s how I began to really kind of get more interested in this idea of how do the mind and body sort of really connect and interface? Because we had been taught they were two different things. But I was just seeing in practice that it really wasn’t. And so that was sort of really kind of gradually steering me more away from this sort of cardiology world and over time into this other world.
Joshua Dolezal:
I have an ethics question for you because all doctors who write about their patients have a kind of liability. You know, you have to protect privacy, HIPAA is a concern and so on. So how do you take — so this guy that we’re talking about, his real name must not be Scott, right? And there must have been some other identifying details that you concealed. And we’re seeing how memoirs can lead to lawsuits by people who feel like they’ve had their story co-opted. How do you protect yourself and how do you do right by the patient so that you’re not sort of cashing in on their suffering, as some critics might say?
Damon Tweedy:
Yeah, no, I mean — several things. One is that, you know, in these stories, I never present myself as — well, at least I don’t think I do — as some sort of heroic person. I really talk about my faults and all my shortcomings. It’s not exhibiting narcissism and like, oh, I’m great and I’m saving it. I’m not immune to screwing things up. So that’s one, you know, and learning along the way.
I think the other thing — so I think there’s a sense of humility there that I think is important. I think it’s also important to, you know — these stories aren’t told just to be salacious. These stories are told because it’s really to put a human face on these issues. Because I think a lot of times it’s too abstract. People can’t understand what mental illness is, they can’t understand what racism is. But putting a story — this is what it looks like, and this is how people are affected, and this is what we can do to make this better. Because there’s always the other piece: what’s changed? What’s gotten better? How can we make this story turn into something that’s helpful, that’s actually going to help people? So those are the things that I think are really important for me as I think about story.
But in terms of details — no, I’ve never had any situation where someone said, oh, you wrote about me and why did you do that? There’s definitely ways to sort of protect yourself from that, whether it’s, you know, changing names or where somebody’s from or some aspect of their physical appearance — maybe they’re 6’3”, maybe they’re 5’10”. There are all sorts of ways to sort of change that to make it so it’s not like, oh, you’re talking about this particular person, and that kind of thing for sure.
Joshua Dolezal:
Is that a case-by-case basis with your editors, or do you have a method that you use when you’re protecting someone?
Damon Tweedy:
I have a method I use, but then there’s also sometimes editors will have additional input. But it’s never been presented as an issue. I mean, and again, I think a lot of times — what is your intent? Are you just trying to tell a salacious story just for shock value? But me, no, I mean, some of these stories are difficult, but the intent is — how do we learn from these things? How do we make things better? And where do we go wrong?
I think one of the things in medicine — like you go back to the race topic — you know, I think if we just look at history and say, oh, well, people in the past were bad and we’re better now, I think that’s really dangerous to do. It’s easy to do that, right? Because, you know, we don’t have segregated hospitals and all that. It’s easy to do that, but it’s also very dangerous. I think there were people in that time who thought they were doing the right thing but we underestimate how much the surrounding world influences us. I think there’s things that people are doing now we know that people will look back on and think wow how do we allow these things to happen and how can you be someone who sort of helps speak out against that.
Because even in the ‘50s, there were doctors who wanted change, but maybe they didn’t have the place to do it, but they were speaking out. And how can you be the voice that helps that conversation? And so I think it’s a certain humility — recognizing your own shortcomings and your own potential to do bad. Me, all of us — to me, that’s a starting point.
Joshua Dolezal:
Yeah. And a really good example of that in the book is you experience kind of your own burnout, breakdown. You have to take a break, sort of get some counseling. And that’s kind of a staple in doctor memoirs — to flip the script and become a patient and then see things from the other side. So in this book about the importance of integrating mental health care and general medicine, your own story seems really key. So walk us through that. What led up to this — I think you snapped, you were trying to drain off some fluid and you couldn’t get the procedure right and it kind of blew up, but there had been a lot building up to that. So tell us about that scene, if you would, and then the process that you went through and what it taught you about the importance of everyone seeking care.
Damon Tweedy:
Yeah, I would say the brief part is this. So doctors are kind of indoctrinated — at least they were when I was in training. You got to be tough, right? You know, especially intern year, there’s no time to be — you know, you got to just do everything. It’s all about the patient. No time for whining. The worst thing you could do is be seen as soft, you know — that sort of mentality. And, you know, I was on board and I was doing well and I was good with my hands. And then there was one night where things just — stress built up and I couldn’t do this one thing. And, you know, rather than think of that as just a difficult moment, I got really upset, in front of a student and then my colleague. And then the next day, I wouldn’t talk to the chief resident because I was worried that, you know, they might have heard about me losing my cool.
And the chief resident was like, “No, I think — man, you seem really stressed and I’m concerned about you.” And my defense, my wall went up: no, I’m good. I’m good. I’m good. And he’s like, “No, I’m really, you know, I’m really kind of worried about you.” And I kind of got a little bit defensive. But then I don’t know what happened — something clicked inside of me and I just started crying. And for me, I grew up as a Black guy in a lower-class, middle-class world. That’s not what you do. You got to be tough. Life’s tough. My parents would tell me life’s tough. You got to be tougher. There’s no time for whining. That’s sort of the world I kind of experienced. And so I probably cried like two or three times in my adult life — once in a high school basketball game when I missed a shot at the buzzer, and once when my grandmother died. Other than that, you know, crying was not — that’s not for little kids. And so for me to cry was just a jarring experience.
And then I went to an employee health person a few days later before I could go back to work. And walking into that employee health space to see a mental health person, which I’d never done before, was mind-boggling. I realized how vulnerable people could be in a way that I never appreciated. Because here I am going to see this guy who doesn’t know me. He’s going to do some sort of evaluation. He’s going to be able to determine whether I can go back to work or not. And I recognized — you know, because when you’re an intern, life is built, piling on you. You get so many patients, so many calls. You can begin to think that you’re the victim, that you’re the one being punished. And you can lose sight of — man, there’s a patient who is so vulnerable. You know, this may be the worst moment they’ve ever experienced. This may be the scariest thing that ever happens in their entire life. You may have seen this medical condition a hundred times, but this is the first time this person’s ever experienced it. And so I never really fully appreciated that until I was on that other end, in that room with that guy. And things went well. I talked to him for 45 minutes. It was great. And I felt better. And I said, wow, maybe this counseling actually does help people. That was my first thought, because I was still in the medical model at that point.
The vulnerability. So now when I talk to — I teach students and residents — I say, when you go into that room to the ER, take a deep breath. You may be so tired, you may be so irritated, whatever may be the case. But this patient — this may be the most vulnerable moment in their life that they will always remember. And so you have to honor that. And so I’ve carried that forward. And I would probably never appreciate it the way that I do if I hadn’t been on the other end as the patient.
Joshua Dolezal:
Yeah. So a lot of this book is making an argument for change. And some of that, I think you make through these really painful stories. So you had a patient that you call Stephanie, who comes in because she needs help — I think she tried to commit suicide, or it’s a cry for help. But she’s deemed a danger to herself. And she’s not aware that because of her income level or lack of insurance, that means that she’s been escorted by police in handcuffs to the state hospital. And no matter what level of compassionate care you bring, you can’t change that. That’s just the law. So I’m curious — and you’re raising awareness of this in your book, but you have a law degree yourself — if you could rewrite the laws about mental health care in situations like that, what would be some changes you would make?
Damon Tweedy:
Part of it is that it already has started to be rewritten. And so I think what my story is trying to show is that sometimes you have to kind of bear witness to suffering. There’s a certain moral injury to it. I feel like the natural order of things is that I think sometimes people conflate advances in technology — because we undoubtedly continue to advance with that, and we always will — with a sense of moral advancement. Which I think is just — I think some people think that we’re supposed to just become more morally attuned and better over time because it’s just the natural order of things. But that’s not true. I think it has to be made. You have to make that happen. And a lot of times people have to, unfortunately, suffer, or bad things have to happen, for that change to happen. I think that’s a terrible truth, unfortunately, based on my own experiences in life and others.
And so this particular story — so basically the upshot is that you have two different women who both had a similar problem. One has health insurance. She’s white. She gets the kind of care that you’d want to get in that situation. The other woman is a Black woman without health insurance. And what happens to her is — even though she came to the hospital, called 911, was ambulanced to the hospital — the laws at the time were such that any mental health patient who was going from one hospital to another had to be involuntarily hospitalized, no matter whether the patient wanted that or not. And so that meant police. That meant — man, think about this — this is your first time ever crying for help, getting care. And what happens to you is you’re treated like a criminal. Again, it goes back to the idea — how do we see mental health? Do we see it as like a criminal thing, a sin thing, or is it something that’s medical, right? It goes back to that whole central question. If you think about it as a crime, then yeah, handcuffs, police is the way to go.
But she had taken a handful of pills because she was dealing with a lot of grief and she had no sort of way to process it. A lot of us might be in that same situation, but why is that a crime? But that’s how the system sort of treated it. And so she was taken in handcuffs to a state hospital. It was a dreadful thing. And so enough of us had seen that happen that we began to say, we got to do better. We got to change this. And so some of that change happened at the hospital level, but some happened at the state level. And so we began to advocate for the change. And so now that wouldn’t necessarily happen today. So nowadays, that same woman would come to the ER, and the laws have changed such that now there’s discretion. You know, I could have evaluated her and said, no, she’s fine, and the ambulance can take her to the next hospital because this is a medical condition. And so that has changed.
And so part of my — again, are you telling these stories just to sort of be gratuitously depicting suffering, or are you trying to tell these stories because you’re showing this is what happened and this is what it takes to make change? And so that was the goal of that story. A terrible story, but one that would not happen today, thankfully.
Joshua Dolezal:
Yeah, and the reader takes the lesson to heart for sure. So a lot of Facing the Unseen is stating the problem, as in Stephanie’s case. But you do talk a little bit about integrated care and you work presently on an integrated team at the Durham VA. So I thought maybe we could end with that, because that’s maybe the kind of change you’re living — being the change that you want to see, to some extent. What does that integrated team look like? And what are some of the barriers to making that more widespread and reducing this binary between mental health care and general medicine?
Damon Tweedy:
Right. So the traditional model is it’s all separate, right? You go to a medical doctor and they make a referral. You go across town, you go to the basement, you know, somewhere different. And that’s where you get your mental health care. And so the whole premise of integrated care is that, you know, medical is all the same in some ways, right? And so the model is that the mental health providers are situated within the same medical clinic — whether it’s primary care, whether it’s oncology, you name a medical specialty — the mental health doctors are in the same space. So a person comes in for their medical condition, there’s a significant mental health issue connected to it — which we shouldn’t be surprised about. Think about how stressful physical illness is. I mean, it’s like — why are we surprised that they’re connected, that one relates to the other? It’s all connected, right? Why is that such a shocking revelation? It’s not, but in practice it is.
And so we’re there physically. And so that reduces wait times, because it increases the likelihood of the person being seen in the first place. Because if you take someone — I’ve had to take off work to get to a medical appointment. And now you’re telling me I got to take off work again to go across town to see someone else. And you’re also saying that I’m just crazy, that this medical problem is all in my head. It just sets up barriers. And so the whole point is that we sort of break down those barriers and meet people where they are.
So, yeah, I supervise a team of several social workers, psychologists, other psychiatrists, and some nurses — a multidisciplinary team. And we need to meet people where they are. And there are a lot of great stories I talk about in the book — I don’t have enough time to go into them — but how this integrated care model can help save lives. And it helps the doctors on both ends as well.
The other thing I think is really important for me moving forward is also how do you train the next generation to have a better perspective on these issues? I told you my training was very separate. So I teach a course at Duke where the whole purpose is to teach doctors who are not going to be psychiatrists to really appreciate mental health illness in a different way. Maybe this one story will really illustrate it.
So several years ago, I had a student who was in this class. I took these students to something called a clubhouse. And clubhouses are places where people with severe mental illness are treated in a non-medical way. It’s about how do you build community? How do you learn to eat better? How do you get job skills training? It’s very non-medical, but it’s very important.
And so in this space, he saw a young woman who he had seen months earlier in an acute hospital setting, where she was acutely ill, paranoid, getting injections and medicines and that sort of thing. He saw her in this space several months later, and she was like a different person. She was doing well. She was going back to work. She was going to school. And he told me — as others have told me — he said, “I didn’t know that people with schizophrenia could actually ever get better. I thought they were always that way.” And I think that’s how a lot of people feel.
And so for him to be able to see — so now he can see a label in a chart and not only have that image of the hospital person, but he can also have the image of this person who is doing well. And I think that does so much, because a lot of times in the medical system, you get a label on a chart and you base it on what you’ve experienced. And if all you ever see is the worst of a particular thing versus the whole spectrum, it conditions you to sort of take shortcuts and maybe not give the patient the care they deserve. And so he wrote me years later — he’s an oncologist now — saying how important that experience was for him to be able to see both sides of a particular illness. And so that’s what the course really seeks to do.
Joshua Dolezal:
Thanks so much. That’s, I think, a great note to end on. And I can’t wait to hear more in your next book. I know writers are superstitious, and maybe you don’t want to talk about what you’re working on, so I won’t push you on that. But I so appreciate your insights and your time today. Thanks for joining me.
Damon Tweedy:
Yeah, and I thank everyone who joined and listened for all this. I know I can ramble at times, but, you know, if you haven’t checked out my books, there’s certainly more in them. And also that podcast I told you about — that’s something we didn’t discuss at all. I think there’s a lot of storytelling in that. That’s a whole different form of writing. Maybe that’s something we can talk about another time. But I think that’s really a story worth being told as well. How does the past connect to where we are today and how do we learn from that to move forward to make things better?
Joshua Dolezal:
Thanks so much, Dr. Tweedy. That’s the thing not named for today. Next time, I’ll speak with Kimberly Warner about her book, Unfixed, from the patient’s side. And we’ll dig into what illness narratives are all about. So until then, take care.
Damon Tweedy:
Thanks so much.
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