OT conversations
This episode challenges the belief that clinicians must feel confident before taking on responsibility. Drawing from real clinical culture and training environments, the episode reframes confidence not as a prerequisite for responsibility, but as a product of experience. It explores how avoidance disguised as safety can stall professional growth, and why scaffolded responsibility—rather than early escalation—builds capable, safe practitioners. Key Themes: * Confidence as an outcome, not a starting point * Responsibility as a training tool, not a reward * The hidden cost of removing responsibility “to be kind” * Graduated responsibility vs. avoidance * Why discomfort is a normal and necessary stage of development * Reframing safety around systems and escalation, not confidence Core Message: If confidence is treated as a prerequisite, learning never begins. If responsibility is scaffolded, confidence is manufactured. Who This Episode Is For: * Band 5 and Band 6 clinicians * Supervisors and practice educators * Service leads involved in workforce development * Anyone navigating learning, responsibility, and professional confidence Takeaway: Feeling unsure does not mean you are not ready. Responsibility—when bounded and supported—is how clinicians are built.
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