This week’s episode lives in the gray space most physicians don’t talk about publicly. Not clinical technique or policy, but what happens internally after years of performance, pressure, and building a life that looks successful on paper, then realizing that might not be the whole story.
Dr. Priya Rao Kothapalli, MD, FACC, FSCAI, joins us to reflect on training, depression in fellowship, moral injury in early practice, leaving a job less than a year in, and learning to trust intuition in and out of the cath lab. The discussion moves through suffering, ego, art in medicine, fasting, spirituality, risk, and what success actually means when you strip away titles and status.
04:56 Quitting the job and questioning who you are
10:27 Pressure, intuition, and preparing for life-and-death decisions
18:07 Fasting, presence, and testing your limits
23:21 Academia, ego, and realizing misalignment
27:55 Taking risks and trusting when life whispers
33:36 Material safety
44:14 How to become more intuitive
49:44 Rest, regulation, and showing up as a better physician
Who Should Listen
Physicians, surgeons, and interventionalists navigating identity shifts, burnout, or career inflection points. Anyone in medicine who feels the tension between performance and alignment will recognize themselves in this conversation.
About Dr. Priya Kothapalli
Dr. Priya Rao Kothapalli, MD, FACC, FSCAI is a Houston-based, quadruple board-certified interventional cardiologist specializing in coronary and structural heart disease who combines high-stakes procedural expertise with media and education initiatives as founder of the Open Heart podcast and storytelling platform bridging medicine and broader cultural inquiry.
Connect with Dr. Priya
💼 LinkedIn: Priya Rao Kothapalli, MD, FACC, FSCAI
🎙️ Podcast: Open Heart Podcast
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If this conversation reshaped how you think about identity in medicine, intuition in the cath lab, or the risks of stepping outside a traditional path, share it with a colleague who’s quietly questioning their next move. A quick review also helps more physicians find conversations like this.