Show Notes
Dr. Shehz's inspiring journey from growing up as an undocumented immigrant to becoming a successful ophthalmologist and space economy specialist will leave you feeling uplifted and motivated. His story of overcoming adversity and finding purpose offers inspirational insights on resilience, self-discovery, and gaining a transformative perspective on life.
This inspirational episode is for anyone facing challenges in your personal or professional life, seeking motivation to overcome obstacles and find your true purpose. If you've ever felt like you don't belong or struggled with identity, Dr. Shehz's inspiring story will resonate deeply and provide valuable insights on resilience, self-discovery, and the power of perspective.
Are You Looking for the Links?
- Visit Dr. Shehz's Website: VisionaryDoc.com
- Connect with Dr. Shehz on Instagram @Visionary.Doc
- Send Kevin a Voice Message
- Become an Awesome Supporter
What's It All About?
In this captivating and inspiring episode, Dr. Shehzad Batliwala "Dr. Shehz" shares his remarkable journey from moving away from his home in India with his family at just 7 years old to living as an undocumented immigrant in America to becoming a successful ophthalmologist and space economy specialist. He opens up about the challenges he faced growing up, including his family's immigration struggles, his mother's mental illness, and his constant feeling of not belonging. Dr. Shehz reveals how he found solace in academic success and developed a profound connection to space and the stars.
Through his inspirational story, you will gain insights into resilience, the importance of finding one's purpose, and the transformative power of shifting perspectives.
What You Are About to Learn:
- Discover how adversity can be transformed into personal strength and resilience through Dr. Shehz's inspiring example
- Learn the importance of finding your true purpose beyond societal expectations
- Gain a powerful and inspiring perspective on belonging and interconnectedness
Press PLAY to hear Dr. Shehz's inspiring story and gain valuable insights that will change your perspective on life's challenges and help you unleash your inner fire.
Hey, it's Kevin!
I hope you enjoyed today's episode! If there is ever anything I can do for you, please don't hesitate to reach out. Below, you will find ALL the places and ALL the ways to connect!
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Stay Awesome! Live Inspired!
© 2024 Grit, Grace, & Inspiration
undocumented immigrant, serial entrepreneur, ophthalmologist, space economy, resilience, immigrant journey, purpose in life, overcoming adversity, NASA internship, personal growth, mental health, belonging, vision issues in space, eye surgery, self-awareness, childhood struggles, immigrant success stories, inspirational stories, purpose and fulfillment, community connection
Show Transcript
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Kevin Lowe: How does a kid living in America as an undocumented immigrant,
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Kevin Lowe: facing adversity at every turn, become a serial entrepreneur,
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Kevin Lowe: a pioneering ophthalmologist, and a space economy specialist?
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Kevin Lowe: Dr. Shez, he describes his own story as a testament to the power of curiosity,
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Kevin Lowe: humility, and an unwavering spirit. it.
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Kevin Lowe: This, my friend, is an interview with Dr.
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Kevin Lowe: Shez, an interview that's going to have you entertained, but more so,
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Kevin Lowe: have you leaving feeling a little bit better than when you came.
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Kevin Lowe: This is episode 342. I look forward to seeing you inside.
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Yo, are you ready to flip the script on life? Because those bad days,
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they're just doors to better days.
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And that's exactly what we do here at Grit, Grace, & Inspiration.
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Your host, Kevin Lowe. He's been flipping the script on his own life,
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turning over 20 years of being completely blind into straight up inspiration,
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motivation, and encouragement just for you.
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So kick back, relax, and let me introduce you to your host, Kevin Lowe.
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Kevin Lowe: Welcome back to another episode here on Grit, Grace, and Inspiration.
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Kevin Lowe: Today, I'm in the studio with none other than Dr. Shehz.
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Kevin Lowe: Dr. Shehz, welcome to the podcast.
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Dr. Shehz: Thanks for having me, Kevin. It's going to be fun. Super excited.
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Kevin Lowe: Absolutely, man. Well, I'm excited to get to dive into your whole story.
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Kevin Lowe: And I feel like there's always, I feel like in anybody's journey,
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Kevin Lowe: there's always like a pivotal moment that happens.
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Kevin Lowe: Maybe it's at the beginning, maybe it's somewhere along the way that something
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Kevin Lowe: happens that ends up leading us on the direction that we take and ultimately where we are today.
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Kevin Lowe: And and I guess I would love to ask you is when you look back at this journey
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Kevin Lowe: you've been on, where do you feel like things really started that really got
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Kevin Lowe: you on the course that, you know, would end up having all the dominoes fall to lead where we are?
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Dr. Shehz: Gosh, that is a very good question, because I guess it depends on which dominoes you're talking about.
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Dr. Shehz: You know, I sort of think about my life from, you know, two different, I guess, perspectives.
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Dr. Shehz: One is there's this journey that I took to become an eye doctor,
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Dr. Shehz: which I don't, you know, it's not something that was like I consciously like chose.
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Dr. Shehz: And I know that sounds silly because it's like, what do you mean,
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Dr. Shehz: dude? You went to school for like 13 years, right?
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Dr. Shehz: I had to make those decisions to get to where I am.
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Dr. Shehz: But you know how like you learn a language and or speak like your native language
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Dr. Shehz: and you just like wake up one day and you start speaking it.
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Dr. Shehz: You don't really remember like learning it, right? Because it's like part of me.
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Dr. Shehz: That's how becoming a doctor was for me. I was always sort of just like told.
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Dr. Shehz: That that's what I'm going to do. You know, those were my, those were the expectations
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Dr. Shehz: my parents had and my extended family had.
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Dr. Shehz: And so there was no other like question in my mind.
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Dr. Shehz: It was, you know, even though I did all of these other things along the way,
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Dr. Shehz: like start a business and, you know, some other things, it was always,
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Dr. Shehz: always, I'm going to be a physician.
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Dr. Shehz: And so when you go through life in that way, I don't think you really like appreciate
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Dr. Shehz: the true power and gratitude of the thing that you were able to do, right?
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Dr. Shehz: Like I'm a physician and I always just never really like truly understood what
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Dr. Shehz: that meant because I felt like I never had the agency to like choose that path
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Dr. Shehz: my way, right? Out of my own belief.
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Dr. Shehz: Because, you know, even though, I mean, you would think like I'm an eye surgeon,
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Dr. Shehz: I do all of these beautiful surgeries to help people see, you would think that
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Dr. Shehz: I would be very like fulfilled and happy on the inside, but I wasn't.
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Dr. Shehz: I felt very empty on the inside, right?
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Dr. Shehz: Even though externally on paper, I looked really good. I looked super accomplished.
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Dr. Shehz: And that's when phase two of my
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Dr. Shehz: life started. When I really started to dig deep into why was I not happy?
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Dr. Shehz: You know, what was the reason for my not feeling fulfilled, even though everything
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Dr. Shehz: seemed to be going really well.
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Dr. Shehz: So when I dug deep there, I realized that I didn't know what my purpose was,
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Dr. Shehz: right? I didn't know what my purpose was.
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Dr. Shehz: I was just kind of going along life to doing what I thought I was supposed to
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Dr. Shehz: do, doing the things that I was told I should do, but I didn't know what I wanted
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Dr. Shehz: to do or what I was doing, right?
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Dr. Shehz: What is my purpose and what really gets me super excited?
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Dr. Shehz: Ophthalmology, eye surgery is one angle of that, is one dimension of that.
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Dr. Shehz: But I'm sure when you read my bio, you're like, man, this guy is like all over the place.
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Dr. Shehz: You know, I have a lot of different aspects to my personality.
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Dr. Shehz: I like to do a lot of different things.
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Dr. Shehz: And I would say just recently over the last two, three years,
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Dr. Shehz: when I've just really been on this journey of self-awareness and introspection,
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Dr. Shehz: I've realized that my purpose,
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Dr. Shehz: is not only to help people see the beauty of our world through physical means, through what I do.
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Dr. Shehz: Also to help others see that we all belong. We are all in this thing that we
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Dr. Shehz: call life, this game together, right?
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Dr. Shehz: There is this overlying theme of oneness that I have discovered for myself that
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Dr. Shehz: really combats the loneliness that I've felt my whole life.
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Dr. Shehz: And I want others to see that as well.
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Dr. Shehz: Because I think once we realize that we all belong and that we're all one,
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Dr. Shehz: we're humanity first, right?
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Dr. Shehz: We're not these different races and these different ways in which we like split
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Dr. Shehz: humanity apart. We're all one.
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Dr. Shehz: So I hope that answers your question, but it's kind of in two phases.
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Dr. Shehz: You know, I got to be in an eye surgeon and then I realized, wait, hold on.
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Dr. Shehz: My purpose extends beyond that. Even though what I do, I love what I do,
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Dr. Shehz: right? I mean, it's a privilege to do what I do.
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Dr. Shehz: But that's really the impact that I want to have in this world.
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Kevin Lowe: Yeah. You know what? You know what I love about that so much is I do feel like
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Kevin Lowe: so many people can relate to that,
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Kevin Lowe: is that life is so many times just this idea of going through the motions on
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Kevin Lowe: that path that you think what you're supposed to be doing.
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Kevin Lowe: And it's just ingrained in you that you're going to go to college,
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Kevin Lowe: you're going to do whatever career and you never actually stopped to really think about things.
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Kevin Lowe: And, and so to hear you here in the height of your career, realizing,
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Kevin Lowe: wow, maybe there's more to me than just this.
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Dr. Shehz: Absolutely. Absolutely. That was, that was, that was a huge part of it.
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Dr. Shehz: And some of it has to do with, you know, another thing I realized is like,
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Dr. Shehz: some of it has to do with just the nature of medical training in this country, right?
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Dr. Shehz: Probably in the world, you know, because I had some, you know,
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Dr. Shehz: burnout is such a catchphrase, it's such a buzzword, but some of it was definitely
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Dr. Shehz: burnout just because of the system in which we operate, right?
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Dr. Shehz: The ridiculous, you know, insurance game that we have to play as doctors.
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Dr. Shehz: You know, it gets really, really just...
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Dr. Shehz: It's cumbersome, you know, part of it is like, I just want to be a doctor.
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Dr. Shehz: Can I just be a doctor? No, you also got to do some of the other logistical
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Dr. Shehz: and admin stuff. So that was part of it.
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Dr. Shehz: But something happens in each of our lives that, you know, I call it sort of
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Dr. Shehz: like you hit your bottom, right?
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Dr. Shehz: When you hit your bottom is when
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Dr. Shehz: you really start looking at a mirror and looking at what you truly want.
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Dr. Shehz: And I think we all go through that at some point in life.
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Dr. Shehz: I just honestly was lucky to go through that early in life.
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Dr. Shehz: You know, I would, I would explain this to my friends and family and they're
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Dr. Shehz: like, man, you're having a quarter life crisis. What's wrong with you?
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Dr. Shehz: I guess I am, but I would rather have a quarter life crisis than a midlife crisis.
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Dr. Shehz: I want to figure it out early. You know what I mean?
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Kevin Lowe: So that is, that is too funny.
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Dr. Shehz: Not to say that I've figured anything out, but man, in this phase of my life,
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Dr. Shehz: I'm 33 years old. I'm going to be 34 in like two weeks.
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Dr. Shehz: I can't believe it. I have so much more clarity now than I've ever had before.
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Dr. Shehz: And clarity is a wonderful thing, man.
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Kevin Lowe: Yeah, absolutely. Well, well,
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Kevin Lowe: give me an idea of, cause I'm curious at this point to understand more about
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Kevin Lowe: who, who you are in terms of your background, where you came from,
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Kevin Lowe: because I read that you lived,
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Kevin Lowe: basically you came to America with your family from India.
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Dr. Shehz: Yep, yep.
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Kevin Lowe: Talk to me about that whole journey in your story.
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Dr. Shehz: Yeah, so we came from India when I was seven years old. My dad,
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Dr. Shehz: life was very, very tough in India.
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Dr. Shehz: And so he decided to pick up in his early 20s and move his entire family across the world.
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Dr. Shehz: Can you imagine coming to a brand new country?
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Dr. Shehz: Got a seven-year-old kid, had a younger sister. She was six months old.
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Dr. Shehz: And you're just trying to figure out, you know,
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Dr. Shehz: if there's something better out there for you. So, you know,
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Dr. Shehz: kind of the very typical sort of immigrant dream, if you will,
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Dr. Shehz: right, that we that we hear about.
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Dr. Shehz: And it's such a common story among so many people. And when you got here,
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Dr. Shehz: we came on a tourist visa.
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Dr. Shehz: And 20 something years later, we're still touring, man.
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Dr. Shehz: America's so big, there's so much to see. No, I mean, so we came on a tourist
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Dr. Shehz: visa and there's a particular process you're supposed to go through to legally
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Dr. Shehz: immigrate into the country.
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Dr. Shehz: And my dad just didn't know about that, right? He didn't even graduate from
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Dr. Shehz: high school, really didn't have any formal education and training in any way, neither of my parents.
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Dr. Shehz: And so he came here and he was working like three different jobs, just trying to survive.
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Dr. Shehz: And before we knew it, our visas had expired and our whole family became undocumented.
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Dr. Shehz: And so those initial years of my life were spent in that way.
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Dr. Shehz: I didn't get my green card until I was 22 years old.
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Dr. Shehz: So from 7 to 22, I was one of those illegal aliens.
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Dr. Shehz: So from 7 to 22, no green card, got my green card at 22, got my citizenship at 25.
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Dr. Shehz: And then my world just completely changed, right? I mean, I was able to go to medical school.
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Dr. Shehz: I was able to intern at NASA. I did some of the initial research on vision issues
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Dr. Shehz: that astronauts have in space.
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Dr. Shehz: And then, you know, I was about to go to residency. I mean, my entire life completely changed.
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Dr. Shehz: And that is what happens when you become a citizen of one of the greatest nations on earth, right?
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Dr. Shehz: So, I mean, I call it my blue superpower.
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Dr. Shehz: My passport is like my superpower. I can pretty much do anything I want,
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Dr. Shehz: you know, anything that you set your mind to.
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Dr. Shehz: I really, really believe that. So that's kind of how that whole immigration journey went.
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Dr. Shehz: And those initial years from seven to 22 without a green card,
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Dr. Shehz: I mean, some of the hardest, hardest years of my life.
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Dr. Shehz: You are limited in a lot of ways without any documentation.
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Dr. Shehz: Can't drive, can't do anything, can't travel.
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Dr. Shehz: All of our discussions as a family would be like, man, like, you know, what do we do?
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Dr. Shehz: Do we do we save money and invest back home?
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Dr. Shehz: Do we save here? I mean, all of those like conversations and just living in
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Dr. Shehz: fear, like that's what I remember right from those early years.
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Dr. Shehz: And it got even worse because my dad was picked up by immigration,
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Dr. Shehz: by ICE, as part of like this kind of raid, if you will.
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Dr. Shehz: And so my dad was placed in deportation proceedings.
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Dr. Shehz: And I mean, I could tell you, I swear I could tell you how to legally immigrate
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Dr. Shehz: to this country, like to the T now.
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Dr. Shehz: Because when I was trying to figure out how to prevent my family from getting
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Dr. Shehz: kicked out of the country, I was calling those shots. I was talking to the lawyers.
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Dr. Shehz: I was learning about this system and how to navigate it so that our family can be together.
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Dr. Shehz: There was just a lot of chaos in that early part of my life.
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Dr. Shehz: And I think in that chaos is probably where I started to feel like I just don't belong.
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Dr. Shehz: You know, when I mentioned earlier about loneliness, like I just always felt like I never belonged.
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Dr. Shehz: Right. As an immigrant, it's really hard to fit in. I couldn't really speak
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Dr. Shehz: the right type of English. My accent was very thick.
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Dr. Shehz: This whole immigration thing. And so I just started creating this narrative
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Dr. Shehz: in my head that like, I'm not supposed to be here. I don't really belong.
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Dr. Shehz: My mother had some mental illness around that same time as well that started
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Dr. Shehz: showing up bipolar and schizophrenia.
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Dr. Shehz: And so I have a very soft spot in my heart for people with mental illness.
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Dr. Shehz: And so like at home, I felt like I didn't belong because of all the chaos in
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Dr. Shehz: this country. I felt like I didn't belong because of the immigration story.
00:13:19.280 --> 00:13:24.060
Dr. Shehz: So the only place I felt like I belonged was school. I was really good at taking
00:13:24.060 --> 00:13:26.120
Dr. Shehz: tests and just knock him out of the park.
00:13:27.220 --> 00:13:31.160
Dr. Shehz: So that became sort of my identity, right?
00:13:31.320 --> 00:13:37.080
Dr. Shehz: I was the guy that was really good at school. And so I just like hung on to that.
00:13:37.180 --> 00:13:41.660
Dr. Shehz: I think that's probably part of the reason why it was always medicine and it
00:13:41.660 --> 00:13:44.320
Dr. Shehz: was always something in academia, right? Because I was good at that.
00:13:44.760 --> 00:13:45.340
Kevin Lowe: Wow. Wow.
00:13:45.835 --> 00:13:51.595
Kevin Lowe: Very, very, very powerful story just of your childhood years.
00:13:51.775 --> 00:13:59.935
Kevin Lowe: I mean, and I appreciate you sharing this story with me for just gaining that perspective.
00:13:59.935 --> 00:14:08.995
Kevin Lowe: I think that in context of where you are, what you've done, I think it speaks very highly of you.
00:14:08.995 --> 00:14:16.195
Kevin Lowe: Because it's very easy, I think, when kind of you could say we're dealt a bad hand.
00:14:16.455 --> 00:14:20.915
Kevin Lowe: It's very easy. The easy thing is to fall victim to that.
00:14:21.235 --> 00:14:21.615
Dr. Shehz: Yes.
00:14:21.755 --> 00:14:31.815
Kevin Lowe: Instead, you found school was your escape. And so you dug into that and you rose above.
00:14:32.555 --> 00:14:35.375
Dr. Shehz: Yes, absolutely. I didn't know what else to do.
00:14:35.695 --> 00:14:40.195
Dr. Shehz: I didn't know what else to do. And I played victim. I played that victim card
00:14:40.195 --> 00:14:43.015
Dr. Shehz: for a while, man, for a long time, right?
00:14:43.575 --> 00:14:47.075
Dr. Shehz: And it's like, it's two sides of a coin, right? Like on one side,
00:14:47.215 --> 00:14:50.095
Dr. Shehz: it's okay to acknowledge that
00:14:50.095 --> 00:14:53.615
Dr. Shehz: you were a victim of your circumstances and you were dealt a bad card.
00:14:53.795 --> 00:14:58.155
Dr. Shehz: I think there is some processing that needs to happen around that, right?
00:14:58.935 --> 00:15:02.355
Dr. Shehz: Because it's a tough thing to go through. And I'm not the only one.
00:15:02.455 --> 00:15:07.095
Dr. Shehz: There's so many people out there. But at some point, you have to take that now
00:15:07.095 --> 00:15:09.395
Dr. Shehz: and be like, okay, now what am I going to do with this, right?
00:15:09.515 --> 00:15:11.715
Dr. Shehz: Where are the gifts in this struggle?
00:15:12.255 --> 00:15:17.875
Dr. Shehz: Yes, there are the things that, you know, are not gifts. They're the things
00:15:17.875 --> 00:15:20.075
Dr. Shehz: that were really, really hard emotionally.
00:15:20.535 --> 00:15:24.695
Dr. Shehz: But every struggle has a gift. What was mine, right?
00:15:24.855 --> 00:15:28.295
Dr. Shehz: And I really had to like think deep about that. And, you know,
00:15:28.375 --> 00:15:33.975
Dr. Shehz: part of your podcast title alludes to this, this like grit and this resilience.
00:15:34.695 --> 00:15:38.915
Dr. Shehz: That's my gift. That's what came from my struggles. Right. And I think that's
00:15:38.915 --> 00:15:42.595
Dr. Shehz: common. That comes from, you know, anything that really pushes you,
00:15:43.152 --> 00:15:49.252
Dr. Shehz: and then you persevere, that is a resilience building exercise, right?
00:15:49.592 --> 00:15:56.532
Dr. Shehz: And so I always say this, there's really nothing that kind of phases me at this point of my life.
00:15:56.672 --> 00:16:01.972
Dr. Shehz: I mean, I haven't experienced the death of a close family member, knock on wood.
00:16:02.252 --> 00:16:04.712
Dr. Shehz: That's like the only thing that I'm like, man, I don't know,
00:16:04.872 --> 00:16:07.772
Dr. Shehz: like you meet some people, you know, they've lost their parents in an early
00:16:07.772 --> 00:16:10.672
Dr. Shehz: age and things like that. I'm like, I don't know what I would do like that.
00:16:10.952 --> 00:16:13.312
Dr. Shehz: I don't how to get through something like that.
00:16:13.732 --> 00:16:17.732
Dr. Shehz: You know, that seems really, really, really difficult from an emotional standpoint.
00:16:17.872 --> 00:16:21.012
Dr. Shehz: But when it comes to like financial difficulties or whatever,
00:16:21.152 --> 00:16:22.592
Dr. Shehz: I mean, I've lived that life.
00:16:22.732 --> 00:16:27.332
Dr. Shehz: You know, we had pretty much nothing when we first came to the States. Right.
00:16:27.792 --> 00:16:31.892
Dr. Shehz: And, you know, and now thankfully my day job allows me to do well.
00:16:32.012 --> 00:16:33.072
Dr. Shehz: I have resources. Right.
00:16:33.492 --> 00:16:37.552
Dr. Shehz: And so there's really nothing that I'm like, I won't be able to handle.
00:16:37.732 --> 00:16:40.252
Dr. Shehz: If you have a U.S. passport, right?
00:16:40.472 --> 00:16:44.192
Dr. Shehz: And you have some resilience, you can pretty much handle anything that comes
00:16:44.192 --> 00:16:46.432
Dr. Shehz: your way. And I really have that mentality now.
00:16:46.712 --> 00:16:51.632
Dr. Shehz: So, and then, you know, I want to share this perspective that I think you specifically
00:16:51.632 --> 00:16:53.252
Dr. Shehz: would really appreciate.
00:16:53.692 --> 00:16:59.752
Dr. Shehz: When I was feeling so alone growing up and I felt like I didn't belong,
00:16:59.992 --> 00:17:04.852
Dr. Shehz: I would go outside and I don't know, for some reason, I was always drawn to
00:17:04.852 --> 00:17:07.172
Dr. Shehz: the stars, right, to space.
00:17:07.452 --> 00:17:11.812
Dr. Shehz: And I would just go out and I would look at the stars, you know,
00:17:12.012 --> 00:17:17.112
Dr. Shehz: houses of chaos, conflict, you know, worried about getting kicked out of the country.
00:17:17.212 --> 00:17:20.592
Dr. Shehz: I'm just like, I just got to leave. So I would go outside, look at the stars.
00:17:20.812 --> 00:17:27.572
Dr. Shehz: I'd look at this like dark sky and I just would have this like calmness that came about me.
00:17:27.732 --> 00:17:31.012
Dr. Shehz: And when I thought deeper into that, I realized that, you know,
00:17:31.012 --> 00:17:36.692
Dr. Shehz: I am one of seven or eight billion people on this planet, right?
00:17:36.972 --> 00:17:38.892
Dr. Shehz: And we all have our struggles, right?
00:17:39.263 --> 00:17:45.063
Dr. Shehz: And we are all on planet Earth. And we are one of many planets in our solar system.
00:17:45.203 --> 00:17:48.843
Dr. Shehz: And we're one of millions of solar systems in our galaxy.
00:17:49.303 --> 00:17:52.203
Dr. Shehz: And there are billions of galaxies in this universe.
00:17:52.563 --> 00:17:56.803
Dr. Shehz: So when you zoom out like that, I was just like, what am I even like?
00:17:57.063 --> 00:17:58.883
Dr. Shehz: What am I even crying about?
00:17:59.243 --> 00:18:03.423
Dr. Shehz: You know, my life, yes, I've gone through some struggles, but man,
00:18:03.543 --> 00:18:08.143
Dr. Shehz: I'm just like a little bump in the road compared to the grand scheme of things. Right.
00:18:08.423 --> 00:18:14.083
Dr. Shehz: So that perspective would always serve to ground me, you know,
00:18:14.323 --> 00:18:19.543
Dr. Shehz: and help me cope and manage the different things that I was going through.
00:18:19.763 --> 00:18:23.403
Dr. Shehz: And then last two, three years, when I mentioned earlier in the podcast about
00:18:23.403 --> 00:18:29.243
Dr. Shehz: this clarity that I've found, I went to that same perspective again.
00:18:29.783 --> 00:18:33.163
Dr. Shehz: This time I thought about it from an astronaut's viewpoint.
00:18:33.943 --> 00:18:40.623
Dr. Shehz: When an astronaut goes to space, they see Earth from that vantage point, right?
00:18:40.983 --> 00:18:47.963
Dr. Shehz: And the only thing keeping all of us alive is this razor-thin blue atmosphere.
00:18:48.743 --> 00:18:55.763
Dr. Shehz: If that was gone, we could all be dead. And from space, you don't see the borders
00:18:55.763 --> 00:18:59.103
Dr. Shehz: that we have artificially created on maps on Earth.
00:18:59.863 --> 00:19:04.123
Dr. Shehz: You know you just see humanity so
00:19:04.123 --> 00:19:07.503
Dr. Shehz: that's what i was alluding to earlier when i said that like perspective
00:19:07.503 --> 00:19:10.823
Dr. Shehz: of oneness and interconnectedness it's called
00:19:10.823 --> 00:19:14.803
Dr. Shehz: the overview effect and astronauts describe this any astronaut you listen to
00:19:14.803 --> 00:19:18.543
Dr. Shehz: i'm a nerd when it comes to nasa and space so i listen to astronaut interviews
00:19:18.543 --> 00:19:23.023
Dr. Shehz: on youtube most people probably don't do that but when they describe the overview
00:19:23.023 --> 00:19:28.163
Dr. Shehz: effect it is like this profound shift of oneness and belonging and so i thought
00:19:28.163 --> 00:19:30.103
Dr. Shehz: about it. I was like, wait, wait, hold on.
00:19:30.643 --> 00:19:34.343
Dr. Shehz: If we all belong, then how can we ever feel alone?
00:19:35.870 --> 00:19:41.030
Dr. Shehz: Right. So it was just this like this, this perspective shift that I really want
00:19:41.030 --> 00:19:46.690
Dr. Shehz: people to tap into because you don't have to go to space to be able to appreciate that, you know.
00:19:47.250 --> 00:19:49.790
Dr. Shehz: So anyway, I just want to mention that.
00:19:50.330 --> 00:19:55.910
Kevin Lowe: Yeah. Wow. I think I'm probably not the only one wondering, why didn't you go
00:19:55.910 --> 00:20:05.310
Kevin Lowe: into psychology? because your perspective on seeing life isn't common. It's very deep.
00:20:05.510 --> 00:20:09.990
Kevin Lowe: It's very powerful. And I think that's an amazing aspect of who you are.
00:20:10.370 --> 00:20:14.930
Dr. Shehz: Thanks, man. I appreciate that. You know, there's a reason I didn't go to psychiatry.
00:20:15.230 --> 00:20:22.590
Dr. Shehz: It's because I had an ego and an ambition that was rooted in trying to prove
00:20:22.590 --> 00:20:27.430
Dr. Shehz: my worth because I never felt like I belonged. I never felt I didn't have a lot of self-worth.
00:20:27.690 --> 00:20:31.910
Dr. Shehz: I was, you know, abused in a lot of different ways when I was growing up and
00:20:31.910 --> 00:20:35.150
Dr. Shehz: emotional, psychological, sexual abuse.
00:20:35.490 --> 00:20:37.690
Dr. Shehz: I mean, I've gone through those things. Right.
00:20:38.050 --> 00:20:40.770
Dr. Shehz: And it's kind of a vulnerable thing to talk about, to be honest,
00:20:40.850 --> 00:20:44.110
Dr. Shehz: but I know I'm not the only one. It's very common.
00:20:44.350 --> 00:20:48.910
Dr. Shehz: And it was very common in India back in those days. And I think it still really is.
00:20:49.070 --> 00:20:56.610
Dr. Shehz: But when you go through that, you just have this like feeling of unworthiness.
00:20:56.790 --> 00:21:02.010
Dr. Shehz: It's very hard to put into words, but you just feel crappy about yourself.
00:21:02.350 --> 00:21:08.530
Dr. Shehz: So in my mind, because the only thing that made me feel good about myself was
00:21:08.530 --> 00:21:12.610
Dr. Shehz: my ability to achieve things in school and grades,
00:21:12.890 --> 00:21:19.390
Dr. Shehz: I always had it in my head that I'm just going to achieve to the highest levels possible.
00:21:19.610 --> 00:21:22.210
Dr. Shehz: And then I'll finally feel like I'm good enough.
00:21:22.650 --> 00:21:28.730
Dr. Shehz: So when it came time to apply to medical school, I'm a doctor of osteopathic
00:21:28.730 --> 00:21:30.890
Dr. Shehz: medicine. I'm a DO, right? I'm not an MD.
00:21:31.230 --> 00:21:36.930
Dr. Shehz: And back then, the reason I applied to DO schools was because my ex-wife now,
00:21:37.070 --> 00:21:40.190
Dr. Shehz: but my wife at the time, she was applying to pharmacy school.
00:21:40.370 --> 00:21:42.470
Dr. Shehz: And so we wanted to be on the same campus.
00:21:42.670 --> 00:21:46.610
Dr. Shehz: And so there was a DO school and there was a pharmacy school in the same campus in Fort Worth, Texas.
00:21:46.850 --> 00:21:50.510
Dr. Shehz: So that's where I applied. That's where I got in. I never really understood
00:21:50.510 --> 00:21:56.390
Dr. Shehz: that as a DO, it becomes very competitive and challenging to match into like
00:21:56.390 --> 00:21:58.690
Dr. Shehz: competitive specialties like neurosurgery.
00:22:00.070 --> 00:22:01.850
Dr. Shehz: Ophthalmology, radiology, dermatology.
00:22:02.030 --> 00:22:05.250
Dr. Shehz: Those are all extremely competitive specialties. and there are some more.
00:22:05.490 --> 00:22:10.890
Dr. Shehz: And as a DO, you're more sort of pushed towards going into primary care medicine
00:22:10.890 --> 00:22:14.070
Dr. Shehz: because it's a very holistic way of looking at the human body.
00:22:14.210 --> 00:22:16.310
Dr. Shehz: And so it just fit primary care medicine.
00:22:16.550 --> 00:22:19.330
Dr. Shehz: Well, somewhere along the way, the narrative shifted to where,
00:22:19.410 --> 00:22:22.410
Dr. Shehz: oh, DOs are inferior, MDs are superior and all this stuff.
00:22:22.590 --> 00:22:26.950
Dr. Shehz: And for a guy who puts his entire worst,
00:22:27.615 --> 00:22:33.695
Dr. Shehz: right? Self-worth into achieving. I'm like, wait, hold on. What did I do to myself? I became a D.O.
00:22:34.255 --> 00:22:38.615
Dr. Shehz: You know? So you're telling me I'm not good enough? I already feel like I'm
00:22:38.615 --> 00:22:40.995
Dr. Shehz: not good enough. You're telling me I'm not good enough even more?
00:22:41.135 --> 00:22:43.615
Dr. Shehz: So wait, what are you saying I can't do?
00:22:43.895 --> 00:22:45.935
Dr. Shehz: Oh, I can't do a competitive specialty?
00:22:46.455 --> 00:22:50.075
Dr. Shehz: Hold my chai. Watch me, right? Watch me.
00:22:50.595 --> 00:22:56.935
Dr. Shehz: Watch me do something competitive. Watch how I do it because I need to do it. I got to feel worthy.
00:22:57.595 --> 00:23:02.475
Dr. Shehz: It sounds ridiculous in a way, but these are the conversations I'm having with myself.
00:23:02.695 --> 00:23:06.135
Dr. Shehz: So I chose ophthalmology for a lot of reasons.
00:23:06.155 --> 00:23:10.615
Dr. Shehz: This wasn't the only reason, you know, I mean, it's a good mixture of medicine
00:23:10.615 --> 00:23:14.055
Dr. Shehz: or clinic and surgery, right? It's very intellectual.
00:23:14.435 --> 00:23:19.235
Dr. Shehz: I mean, I can do cataract surgery in 15, 20 minutes and people see better right away.
00:23:19.575 --> 00:23:24.255
Dr. Shehz: The instant gratification as a doctor high tech field, all of those reasons,
00:23:24.455 --> 00:23:26.655
Dr. Shehz: great work-life balance, all of those reasons were there.
00:23:26.975 --> 00:23:29.775
Dr. Shehz: And then I also thought about psychiatry. I also thought about some of these
00:23:29.775 --> 00:23:34.475
Dr. Shehz: other things I'm interested in, but I was like, no, if I can be the first DO to match,
00:23:35.069 --> 00:23:40.309
Dr. Shehz: into ophthalmology, into this very, very competitive program in Oklahoma,
00:23:40.809 --> 00:23:41.569
Dr. Shehz: University of Oklahoma.
00:23:41.829 --> 00:23:43.709
Dr. Shehz: It's called the Dean McGee Eye Institute. It was like a top,
00:23:43.729 --> 00:23:47.309
Dr. Shehz: top three or top five program at the time. I was like, that's attractive.
00:23:47.529 --> 00:23:51.429
Dr. Shehz: That's what I want to do. So, so that became my goal. Right.
00:23:52.069 --> 00:23:56.169
Dr. Shehz: And I mean, it goes deeper, dude, like this whole like NASA thing.
00:23:56.389 --> 00:24:00.909
Dr. Shehz: I didn't want to just study the vision issues that astronauts had in space.
00:24:01.069 --> 00:24:03.549
Dr. Shehz: I wanted to be an astronaut, right?
00:24:03.729 --> 00:24:06.989
Dr. Shehz: Because then I'm going to be worthy. Because who are astronauts?
00:24:07.889 --> 00:24:11.449
Dr. Shehz: They are the exceptional specimens of humanity, right?
00:24:11.829 --> 00:24:16.909
Dr. Shehz: So I said, I want to be an astronaut. And so I actually like did all the stuff. I interned at NASA.
00:24:17.189 --> 00:24:21.189
Dr. Shehz: So I was like, I'm going to be the first DO to match ophthalmology into this program.
00:24:21.489 --> 00:24:26.129
Dr. Shehz: And then I'm going to be the first DO ophthalmologist as an astronaut.
00:24:26.349 --> 00:24:29.469
Dr. Shehz: I mean, it was like neurotic, right? It was neurotic type of.
00:24:31.109 --> 00:24:33.989
Dr. Shehz: On my podcast, I call it pathological ambush.
00:24:36.709 --> 00:24:44.669
Dr. Shehz: So I went down that road, you know, hit a wall, burnt out for all the reasons I talked about earlier.
00:24:44.849 --> 00:24:51.289
Dr. Shehz: And then I realized, oh my God, this is like the most beautiful field that I
00:24:51.289 --> 00:24:56.009
Dr. Shehz: could have picked. Not only because of what I do in it. I love cataract surgery.
00:24:56.209 --> 00:25:00.089
Dr. Shehz: I love surgery in general. I just get into like this like flow state and you're
00:25:00.089 --> 00:25:03.809
Dr. Shehz: just, it's amazing. And they let me playing my playlists in the OR.
00:25:04.689 --> 00:25:10.569
Dr. Shehz: So I'm jamming to like Bollywood music, you know, doing cataract surgery.
00:25:10.689 --> 00:25:11.849
Dr. Shehz: And it's like, it's super fun.
00:25:12.209 --> 00:25:18.189
Dr. Shehz: But beyond that, right, there's this inherent metaphor of being able to see.
00:25:18.429 --> 00:25:23.189
Dr. Shehz: I was blind to my own truth, my own purpose, my entire life, right?
00:25:23.629 --> 00:25:27.529
Dr. Shehz: And how ironic that now I help people see the beauty of this world.
00:25:27.789 --> 00:25:30.869
Dr. Shehz: But while I was learning to do that, I couldn't see my own truth,
00:25:30.989 --> 00:25:33.809
Dr. Shehz: you know? And so there's this entire.
00:25:34.835 --> 00:25:42.895
Dr. Shehz: Like, language and metaphors in my day job that I can apply to this bigger and
00:25:42.895 --> 00:25:45.535
Dr. Shehz: broader work that I want to do in the world, right?
00:25:45.735 --> 00:25:49.415
Dr. Shehz: So I could not have picked a better field, honestly.
00:25:49.695 --> 00:25:53.015
Dr. Shehz: Everything happens for a reason. I really believe that, especially as I'm learning
00:25:53.015 --> 00:25:55.975
Dr. Shehz: more about my faith. I'm really, really starting to, like, believe that.
00:25:56.215 --> 00:25:59.155
Dr. Shehz: And there's no question in my mind all this happened for for
00:25:59.155 --> 00:26:04.875
Dr. Shehz: a reason right so that's kind of my yeah that's why ophthalmology and eye surgery
00:26:04.875 --> 00:26:09.435
Dr. Shehz: but you're right i mean in terms of like psychiatry psychology dude i i mean
00:26:09.435 --> 00:26:14.615
Dr. Shehz: i love i love that stuff right i love that stuff i'm reading about different
00:26:14.615 --> 00:26:17.035
Dr. Shehz: philosophers and things like that so yeah.
00:26:17.035 --> 00:26:23.315
Kevin Lowe: No i mean i think absolutely fascinating and would you mind expanding i'm kind
00:26:23.315 --> 00:26:28.795
Kevin Lowe: of curious to understand a little bit more about the whole space and NASA aspect
00:26:28.795 --> 00:26:34.115
Kevin Lowe: as far as how has that impacted like what you're doing in work today?
00:26:34.635 --> 00:26:41.335
Dr. Shehz: Yeah. Yeah. So, so initially when I got into that work, it was specifically
00:26:41.335 --> 00:26:45.335
Dr. Shehz: within the context of the vision issues that astronauts have in space.
00:26:45.515 --> 00:26:47.635
Dr. Shehz: You know, I was very fascinated about that.
00:26:47.895 --> 00:26:53.655
Dr. Shehz: I also knew that it would sort of help me set myself apart from the crowd, right?
00:26:53.755 --> 00:26:57.195
Dr. Shehz: In terms of, you know, when you're trying to match into a very competitive specialty,
00:26:57.715 --> 00:27:02.835
Dr. Shehz: and in a program that's never taken a DO before, you have to be a little different.
00:27:03.115 --> 00:27:06.915
Dr. Shehz: And so this was sort of my way to help me stand apart.
00:27:07.135 --> 00:27:10.515
Dr. Shehz: And also it's just like super cool stuff, man. When I interned at NASA for two
00:27:10.515 --> 00:27:12.895
Dr. Shehz: months, I got to live with an astronaut.
00:27:13.115 --> 00:27:15.755
Dr. Shehz: I got to live with Chris Cassidy.
00:27:16.375 --> 00:27:22.315
Dr. Shehz: He at the time was chief of the astronaut office. So he's like the head honcho, the big boss.
00:27:22.635 --> 00:27:25.855
Dr. Shehz: And he was a Navy SEAL before that. And that wasn't good enough.
00:27:25.855 --> 00:27:28.515
Dr. Shehz: So he's like, I want to be an astronaut, you know?
00:27:30.015 --> 00:27:35.615
Dr. Shehz: And for a guy who's like wanting to be good enough, you can imagine my excitement,
00:27:35.815 --> 00:27:39.555
Dr. Shehz: my fascination, right? When I got to live with him, spend time with him.
00:27:39.795 --> 00:27:45.215
Dr. Shehz: I would tour the neutral buoyancy lab, which is where all the astronauts do spacewalk practicing.
00:27:45.555 --> 00:27:48.335
Dr. Shehz: It's like this giant pool, indoor pool.
00:27:48.715 --> 00:27:51.815
Dr. Shehz: And then I would come home and tell him about it.
00:27:51.955 --> 00:27:54.435
Dr. Shehz: I was like, hey, I saw the facility where you train. He's like,
00:27:54.515 --> 00:27:58.375
Dr. Shehz: oh, yeah. And then he told me like all the little juicy details that nobody else knows, you know.
00:27:58.775 --> 00:28:03.575
Dr. Shehz: So it was super, super exciting. So that was like 2017. And then,
00:28:03.615 --> 00:28:04.955
Dr. Shehz: you know, I managed into ophthalmology.
00:28:05.935 --> 00:28:09.715
Dr. Shehz: And for three years, just kind of really drilled down on that because you don't
00:28:09.715 --> 00:28:12.855
Dr. Shehz: really have time to do anything else as a resident.
00:28:13.770 --> 00:28:19.650
Dr. Shehz: And then in 2022, I got an MBA in the space economy, right?
00:28:20.030 --> 00:28:20.390
Kevin Lowe: Okay.
00:28:21.470 --> 00:28:27.110
Dr. Shehz: So again, I finished my training and I was not really feeling fulfilled.
00:28:27.670 --> 00:28:32.990
Dr. Shehz: You know, I was like, well, I'm done. Now what? Is this it? There's got to be something else.
00:28:33.230 --> 00:28:38.070
Dr. Shehz: And so I opened up that space chapter again in my life. And I don't know how this happened.
00:28:38.070 --> 00:28:42.250
Dr. Shehz: I was literally just on the couch, like just surfing the web.
00:28:42.250 --> 00:28:49.450
Dr. Shehz: And this ad popped up for this, you know, first of its kind space MBA program.
00:28:49.450 --> 00:28:54.950
Dr. Shehz: So you learn about this like evolving field of commercial space. Right.
00:28:55.310 --> 00:28:59.070
Dr. Shehz: And I was like, oh my gosh. And again, it was the first cohort.
00:28:59.210 --> 00:29:02.490
Dr. Shehz: I was like, oh my gosh, I got, I got to do this. I'm going to be the first in
00:29:02.490 --> 00:29:04.970
Dr. Shehz: this, in this class to learn about this exciting stuff.
00:29:05.230 --> 00:29:09.110
Dr. Shehz: So I got that. I did that for a whole year, I was surrounded by like,
00:29:09.250 --> 00:29:14.190
Dr. Shehz: you know, Space Force generals and, you know, senior, senior executives of various
00:29:14.190 --> 00:29:16.150
Dr. Shehz: consulting companies and startups.
00:29:16.390 --> 00:29:23.590
Dr. Shehz: I mean, just in here, I was an eye doctor, you know, like everybody was like,
00:29:23.890 --> 00:29:29.050
Dr. Shehz: you know, you go around giving your little intro and everyone had like a little cool, super cool intro.
00:29:29.050 --> 00:29:32.050
Dr. Shehz: And I was like, I'm an eye doctor. I interned at NASA.
00:29:32.430 --> 00:29:36.830
Dr. Shehz: Hi. You know, it just, again, felt kind of, kind of out of place.
00:29:37.010 --> 00:29:42.370
Dr. Shehz: But, but no, that was one of the most exciting, I guess, degrees,
00:29:42.810 --> 00:29:45.230
Dr. Shehz: you know, from a formal education standpoint that I've ever gotten,
00:29:45.470 --> 00:29:46.710
Dr. Shehz: just learning about all this stuff.
00:29:47.310 --> 00:29:53.970
Dr. Shehz: So now that I have much more clarity in terms of what I want to do,
00:29:53.970 --> 00:30:00.350
Dr. Shehz: I'm giving a TEDx talk in October in South Africa on this overview effect,
00:30:00.350 --> 00:30:02.010
Dr. Shehz: this metaphor that I described.
00:30:03.430 --> 00:30:06.310
Dr. Shehz: And so what i want to do is
00:30:06.310 --> 00:30:09.210
Dr. Shehz: i want to one leverage my
00:30:09.210 --> 00:30:12.770
Dr. Shehz: nasa experience to help people
00:30:12.770 --> 00:30:19.410
Dr. Shehz: understand how we can all belong and have more love and compassion for each
00:30:19.410 --> 00:30:26.170
Dr. Shehz: other if we just understand this overview effect this perspective of oneness
00:30:26.170 --> 00:30:31.370
Dr. Shehz: that space provides right so from a spiritual philosophical standpoint,
00:30:31.470 --> 00:30:36.970
Dr. Shehz: I want to bring that into the common person's awareness. That's my first goal.
00:30:37.230 --> 00:30:43.570
Dr. Shehz: The other thing, even though I got the space economy MBA to appear different
00:30:43.570 --> 00:30:47.650
Dr. Shehz: so I can have my, you know, so I can feel worth it.
00:30:48.429 --> 00:30:52.309
Dr. Shehz: What I realized is that I didn't need the MBA to feel that.
00:30:52.809 --> 00:30:57.169
Dr. Shehz: Right. But I got it. And I learned so much, man.
00:30:57.449 --> 00:31:01.789
Dr. Shehz: And it is like, I mean, it is going to be world changing.
00:31:02.249 --> 00:31:05.949
Dr. Shehz: Right. In the next 15, 20 years, you're going to start hearing about,
00:31:06.109 --> 00:31:09.349
Dr. Shehz: wow, people are manufacturing resources in space.
00:31:09.649 --> 00:31:15.049
Dr. Shehz: Wow. We just landed on an asteroid and we're starting to mine resources to bring back to Earth.
00:31:15.589 --> 00:31:19.189
Dr. Shehz: Right. So there are all of these like it's going to hit every industry,
00:31:19.389 --> 00:31:23.469
Dr. Shehz: every job sector because it's a completely, literally a new world.
00:31:23.609 --> 00:31:26.529
Dr. Shehz: And I call it the great equalizer.
00:31:26.749 --> 00:31:28.849
Dr. Shehz: Space can really be the great equalizer.
00:31:29.189 --> 00:31:33.149
Dr. Shehz: Right. People that are marginalized today and feel like they don't have a lot
00:31:33.149 --> 00:31:38.129
Dr. Shehz: of resources because this world is run by billionaires and corporations.
00:31:38.129 --> 00:31:46.909
Dr. Shehz: That world can be run by the people if we open our eyes to actually what's happening in space.
00:31:47.249 --> 00:31:51.949
Dr. Shehz: Most people don't realize it, but when Elon Musk cracked the code on reusable
00:31:51.949 --> 00:31:56.309
Dr. Shehz: rockets, accessing space became so much cheaper, right?
00:31:56.549 --> 00:32:02.389
Dr. Shehz: We can launch rockets, send things to space, and those rockets land vertically back on Earth.
00:32:02.529 --> 00:32:06.729
Dr. Shehz: That is mind-blowing, right? Because before that, Imagine like you got into
00:32:06.729 --> 00:32:13.309
Dr. Shehz: 737, 747 Boeing, you went from here to China, and then you threw away the jet every time you went.
00:32:13.549 --> 00:32:16.249
Dr. Shehz: That's what we were doing before. Rockets would burn down.
00:32:17.149 --> 00:32:22.269
Dr. Shehz: Now, we don't have that problem. So accessing space has gotten much cheaper,
00:32:22.409 --> 00:32:26.589
Dr. Shehz: which means now that entire world is opening up to the common people.
00:32:27.166 --> 00:32:31.406
Dr. Shehz: So the other thing I want to do with my experience in NASA and space is bring
00:32:31.406 --> 00:32:35.086
Dr. Shehz: awareness to this entire field that nobody really knows about.
00:32:35.266 --> 00:32:39.186
Dr. Shehz: And I just want people to get involved in any capacity possible,
00:32:39.186 --> 00:32:45.266
Dr. Shehz: because the likelihood of it affecting their day to day life and their job,
00:32:45.526 --> 00:32:49.126
Dr. Shehz: their livelihood is super high, especially the young generation,
00:32:49.306 --> 00:32:54.846
Dr. Shehz: because this is a futuristic 15, 20 years down the road type of thing. Right. So fascinating.
00:32:54.846 --> 00:33:03.386
Kevin Lowe: Now, do you find, does space hold anywhere, places for advancements in like
00:33:03.386 --> 00:33:05.466
Kevin Lowe: medicine that we're doing here on Earth?
00:33:05.846 --> 00:33:09.986
Dr. Shehz: Absolutely. Yep. So the International Space Station, the ISS,
00:33:10.446 --> 00:33:14.966
Dr. Shehz: it's essentially a orbiting laboratory. Okay.
00:33:15.426 --> 00:33:21.006
Dr. Shehz: And when astronauts go to space, they spend six months or 12 months on a space station.
00:33:21.246 --> 00:33:25.486
Dr. Shehz: They're not just twiddling their thumbs. They're doing a bunch of science on
00:33:25.486 --> 00:33:29.546
Dr. Shehz: space that affects every sector, including medicine and health care.
00:33:29.686 --> 00:33:35.146
Dr. Shehz: So, like, for example, you know, there's research being done on Alzheimer's, right?
00:33:35.406 --> 00:33:41.746
Dr. Shehz: There are certain configurations of proteins that you just cannot make on Earth
00:33:41.746 --> 00:33:44.326
Dr. Shehz: because you have gravity on Earth.
00:33:44.326 --> 00:33:49.466
Dr. Shehz: But when you take gravity away, now that opens up billions of more combinations
00:33:49.466 --> 00:33:55.286
Dr. Shehz: for how you can create certain proteins that can be targeted to cure some of
00:33:55.286 --> 00:33:58.246
Dr. Shehz: these illnesses that we have on Earth, right?
00:33:58.446 --> 00:34:03.486
Dr. Shehz: So that's just one small example of how when you change that big variable of
00:34:03.486 --> 00:34:05.446
Dr. Shehz: gravity, we don't think about it, right?
00:34:05.586 --> 00:34:08.666
Dr. Shehz: Walking on Earth, it's like, you know, we're held to the ground.
00:34:08.806 --> 00:34:13.506
Dr. Shehz: Like, we don't really think about it. But that is the one variable we all have
00:34:13.506 --> 00:34:17.726
Dr. Shehz: in common. And then you take that away in space and all of a sudden creativity
00:34:17.726 --> 00:34:20.226
Dr. Shehz: goes skyrockets, right?
00:34:20.346 --> 00:34:26.546
Dr. Shehz: Because there's so many more things you can do. And that's true in medicine, in engineering, right?
00:34:26.806 --> 00:34:30.706
Dr. Shehz: In industrial things, manufacturing, it's true in all sectors.
00:34:31.266 --> 00:34:36.546
Kevin Lowe: So, yeah, that is absolutely fascinating for yourself.
00:34:36.586 --> 00:34:42.146
Kevin Lowe: I'm curious, what are you looking forward in your own life, personal life, right?
00:34:42.740 --> 00:34:48.800
Kevin Lowe: Whether things you still want to accomplish, things you still want to feel more
00:34:48.800 --> 00:34:50.820
Kevin Lowe: fulfilled in, just out of curiosity.
00:34:51.420 --> 00:34:55.640
Dr. Shehz: Yeah, man, that's a great question. You know, this whole pathological ambition
00:34:55.640 --> 00:35:02.320
Dr. Shehz: and trying to achieve to prove my worth, you know, it's not like I've solved the problem, right?
00:35:02.400 --> 00:35:06.240
Dr. Shehz: I mean, I still have it, you know, it's the reason, it's part of the reason
00:35:06.240 --> 00:35:09.600
Dr. Shehz: why I want to do speaking opportunities and things like that, right?
00:35:09.600 --> 00:35:17.240
Dr. Shehz: But now that I know, right, I have awareness that I'm wired to be seen,
00:35:17.400 --> 00:35:22.320
Dr. Shehz: to feel seen, because I never felt seen in my early childhood.
00:35:22.840 --> 00:35:27.220
Dr. Shehz: Everything that, you know, we bring to our adult lives, it comes from my childhood.
00:35:27.740 --> 00:35:28.840
Dr. Shehz: Right? It comes from our childhood.
00:35:28.980 --> 00:35:31.660
Dr. Shehz: I mean, that's the programming that you bring to your adult life.
00:35:31.760 --> 00:35:37.420
Dr. Shehz: And your job as an adult is to learn that programming and then rewire it so
00:35:37.420 --> 00:35:41.440
Dr. Shehz: that it is healthier. I really think that's the job of an adult, you know.
00:35:41.800 --> 00:35:47.140
Dr. Shehz: So now that I know that that's sort of my blind spot, quote unquote,
00:35:47.220 --> 00:35:51.820
Dr. Shehz: if you will, I'm very careful that, you know, when I choose opportunities that
00:35:51.820 --> 00:35:54.300
Dr. Shehz: I want to participate in, that I'm doing it for the right reasons.
00:35:54.640 --> 00:36:00.880
Dr. Shehz: Right. I'm doing it for me in terms of me wanting to make a broader impact on
00:36:00.880 --> 00:36:04.560
Dr. Shehz: the world and not just to say that I did it.
00:36:05.020 --> 00:36:08.980
Dr. Shehz: Right. So that's that's one thing. So I'm very careful, like,
00:36:09.140 --> 00:36:13.960
Dr. Shehz: you know, what I allow to come into my life now.
00:36:14.180 --> 00:36:17.520
Dr. Shehz: The second thing is relationships. Right.
00:36:17.700 --> 00:36:22.700
Dr. Shehz: I have I mean, I neglected my relationships growing up, you know,
00:36:22.840 --> 00:36:26.260
Dr. Shehz: because I was just focused on one thing was my career and achievements.
00:36:27.050 --> 00:36:32.350
Dr. Shehz: And so, you know, it took me 12 plus years, 13 years to become an eye surgeon.
00:36:32.730 --> 00:36:37.370
Dr. Shehz: And that's a very long time. And I had very little contact.
00:36:38.010 --> 00:36:41.490
Dr. Shehz: Meaningful contact with my parents during that time, you know,
00:36:41.710 --> 00:36:48.070
Dr. Shehz: to the point where like when I came home, I didn't even recognize who my parents
00:36:48.070 --> 00:36:50.790
Dr. Shehz: were anymore after after like 12 years.
00:36:50.790 --> 00:36:55.730
Dr. Shehz: You know, I just felt very disconnected with these people that I claim to love
00:36:55.730 --> 00:36:57.430
Dr. Shehz: more than anything in the world.
00:36:57.690 --> 00:37:01.690
Dr. Shehz: And so my actions are not following my words. What's going on?
00:37:01.810 --> 00:37:02.910
Dr. Shehz: Right. Something's got to change.
00:37:03.090 --> 00:37:08.950
Dr. Shehz: So in this phase of my life and going forward, I'm really prioritizing those things.
00:37:09.130 --> 00:37:12.570
Dr. Shehz: Right. So I'm prioritizing the impact I want to have in this world.
00:37:12.850 --> 00:37:16.670
Dr. Shehz: You know, speaking opportunities, whatever it might be. I'm prioritizing my relationships.
00:37:17.290 --> 00:37:21.770
Dr. Shehz: Just the other day last week, it was, I went on a walk with my mom.
00:37:21.970 --> 00:37:25.370
Dr. Shehz: I can't remember the last time I did that, you know, it was like a Sunday afternoon
00:37:25.370 --> 00:37:29.350
Dr. Shehz: and we just went on a walk together in the neighborhood and I'm holding her hand.
00:37:29.630 --> 00:37:33.830
Dr. Shehz: She's holding my hand. And I can't tell you, man, like my whole life,
00:37:33.830 --> 00:37:37.750
Dr. Shehz: I've been searching for fulfillment and peace and purpose.
00:37:38.070 --> 00:37:41.890
Dr. Shehz: I'm telling you, I felt it in those 20 minutes when I was holding her hand and
00:37:41.890 --> 00:37:43.530
Dr. Shehz: she was holding mine. Right.
00:37:43.930 --> 00:37:49.110
Dr. Shehz: So it comes down to that. It comes down to just those relationships that,
00:37:49.350 --> 00:37:51.850
Dr. Shehz: you know, if you're a high achiever, high performer out there,
00:37:51.950 --> 00:37:52.730
Dr. Shehz: you know what I'm talking about.
00:37:53.050 --> 00:37:59.450
Dr. Shehz: You get so locked in to your own drive, whether it's career or whatever else
00:37:59.450 --> 00:38:03.210
Dr. Shehz: that you neglect all of those other things. And so that's kind of what I'm looking
00:38:03.210 --> 00:38:05.330
Dr. Shehz: forward to more in my life.
00:38:05.410 --> 00:38:09.270
Dr. Shehz: I want to take just more trips and with my family, my parents,
00:38:09.350 --> 00:38:13.290
Dr. Shehz: and just reconnect after all of those years, you know,
00:38:13.410 --> 00:38:18.190
Dr. Shehz: and there's also a lot of like I do just over the last three months,
00:38:18.270 --> 00:38:21.090
Dr. Shehz: I've started to do some counseling and therapy with my parents.
00:38:21.882 --> 00:38:25.462
Dr. Shehz: Because, you know, there was there was some resentment that I was harboring
00:38:25.462 --> 00:38:28.982
Dr. Shehz: for my childhood, even though it had nothing to do.
00:38:29.062 --> 00:38:34.242
Dr. Shehz: Like my dad had no he was you know, he was trying to do the best with cars he was dealt.
00:38:34.702 --> 00:38:36.822
Dr. Shehz: But in my mind, I was looking at it
00:38:36.822 --> 00:38:40.602
Dr. Shehz: from my standpoint. But I grew up undocumented. Like, why did it happen?
00:38:40.702 --> 00:38:43.662
Dr. Shehz: That wasn't my fault. Dad, like I was counting on you.
00:38:44.102 --> 00:38:48.802
Dr. Shehz: And and I've realized that I have not been blaming effectively.
00:38:48.802 --> 00:38:51.062
Dr. Shehz: You know, I'm a big Tony Robbins fan.
00:38:51.522 --> 00:38:54.262
Dr. Shehz: Tony Robbins always says, like, if you're going to blame someone,
00:38:54.502 --> 00:38:56.002
Dr. Shehz: blame effectively, right?
00:38:56.102 --> 00:38:59.982
Dr. Shehz: If you're going to blame them for the bad things, quote unquote,
00:39:00.682 --> 00:39:02.062
Dr. Shehz: then blame them for the good, too.
00:39:02.222 --> 00:39:06.562
Dr. Shehz: I would not have become an eye surgeon if my dad didn't bring me to the U.S.
00:39:06.722 --> 00:39:09.982
Dr. Shehz: My story would not have been possible in any other country on Earth.
00:39:10.222 --> 00:39:14.322
Dr. Shehz: I believe that with all of my heart, because there's just there are certain
00:39:14.322 --> 00:39:16.202
Dr. Shehz: resources and opportunities that the U.S.
00:39:16.342 --> 00:39:18.522
Dr. Shehz: Provides. Yes, we have our issues. we have faults.
00:39:18.882 --> 00:39:22.502
Dr. Shehz: So, you know, you got to blame people effectively, you're going to blame someone.
00:39:22.702 --> 00:39:27.562
Dr. Shehz: And so there's a lot of like processing of that, that needed to happen and forgiveness
00:39:27.562 --> 00:39:29.682
Dr. Shehz: and kind of moving past those things.
00:39:30.022 --> 00:39:35.882
Dr. Shehz: So that's what I'm looking at in this phase of my life is really just improving those relationships.
00:39:36.242 --> 00:39:39.382
Kevin Lowe: Yeah. I love that so much. And, uh,
00:39:40.103 --> 00:39:45.343
Kevin Lowe: I appreciate you being vulnerable and willing to share everything that you've
00:39:45.343 --> 00:39:47.123
Kevin Lowe: done throughout our entire conversation today.
00:39:47.383 --> 00:39:53.863
Kevin Lowe: I feel like this has been a really heartfelt, meaningful conversation that I
00:39:53.863 --> 00:39:55.943
Kevin Lowe: think a lot of people can relate to.
00:39:56.243 --> 00:40:00.423
Kevin Lowe: And I appreciate you being open and honest and willing to share it.
00:40:00.583 --> 00:40:04.223
Dr. Shehz: Thanks a lot, man. I appreciate you too. I shared quite a lot.
00:40:04.443 --> 00:40:06.803
Dr. Shehz: And it also speaks to the host, right? Right.
00:40:07.143 --> 00:40:13.783
Dr. Shehz: You asking the right questions and just giving your guests the space to be vulnerable.
00:40:14.063 --> 00:40:17.683
Dr. Shehz: You know, I just want to say, like, I think that's, first of all, a gift and an art.
00:40:17.903 --> 00:40:22.443
Dr. Shehz: And it's not something we do enough. Right. Like we kind of tend to judge people
00:40:22.443 --> 00:40:28.923
Dr. Shehz: as human beings and judgment and vulnerability are not they don't go hand in hand.
00:40:29.183 --> 00:40:32.623
Dr. Shehz: Right. You have to be in curiosity mode and not judgment mode.
00:40:32.623 --> 00:40:36.383
Dr. Shehz: If you're going to expect somebody to kind of be vulnerable.
00:40:36.383 --> 00:40:39.583
Dr. Shehz: You got to create that space. And I think you do a really good job of that.
00:40:39.703 --> 00:40:42.983
Dr. Shehz: So thanks for asking those questions, man. It was a good conversation.
00:40:43.363 --> 00:40:46.863
Kevin Lowe: Oh, man. Well, I appreciate that. That means a lot to me.
00:40:47.503 --> 00:40:51.883
Kevin Lowe: Dr. Shez, for somebody who they want to stay plugged into your world,
00:40:51.963 --> 00:40:55.023
Kevin Lowe: they want to check out the podcast, where can we send them?
00:40:55.383 --> 00:41:02.923
Dr. Shehz: Yeah, visionarydoc.com, visionarydoc.com. I'm in the process of revamping the website.
00:41:03.203 --> 00:41:07.843
Dr. Shehz: So forgive me if it loads a little slow, but all my social media handles are
00:41:07.843 --> 00:41:10.223
Dr. Shehz: that as well. Instagram would be visionary.doc.
00:41:10.723 --> 00:41:15.543
Kevin Lowe: Okay. Well, I will be sure that all of that is in the show notes for anybody interested.
00:41:16.223 --> 00:41:21.623
Kevin Lowe: Man, I guess I always like to end with one kind of powerful last question.
00:41:21.903 --> 00:41:26.163
Kevin Lowe: And that is for you on this journey you've been on.
00:41:26.723 --> 00:41:32.383
Kevin Lowe: If you could go back to that seven-year-old self, You moved to a new country.
00:41:32.823 --> 00:41:37.103
Kevin Lowe: Everything's difficult. What piece of advice would you want to say to that kid?
00:41:37.543 --> 00:41:41.203
Dr. Shehz: Everything's going to work out just as it's supposed to. Keep your head down
00:41:41.203 --> 00:41:42.443
Dr. Shehz: and keep moving forward.
00:41:42.703 --> 00:41:45.943
Kevin Lowe: I love it. Simple, powerful, amazing.
00:41:46.343 --> 00:41:50.863
Kevin Lowe: Dude, it has been a pleasure to have you here. Thank you so much.
00:41:51.223 --> 00:41:54.843
Dr. Shehz: Thanks a lot, man. This was great. I really enjoyed it. Appreciate your time.
00:41:55.343 --> 00:42:01.363
Kevin Lowe: Absolutely. And for you listening today, my hope is always is that you've had
00:42:01.363 --> 00:42:04.903
Kevin Lowe: something today that you can apply to your own life.
00:42:05.063 --> 00:42:09.303
Kevin Lowe: Something that's reminded you of your own situation, something that you can
00:42:09.303 --> 00:42:14.983
Kevin Lowe: take from this podcast, put it into action and make a positive difference in your life.
00:42:15.223 --> 00:42:18.963
Kevin Lowe: This is another amazing interview here on the podcast.
00:42:19.343 --> 00:42:24.203
Kevin Lowe: My name is Kevin Lowe. This is Grit, Grace, & Inspiration. I hope you have an amazing time.
00:42:24.080 --> 00:42:43.687
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