Inside a Facial Plastic Surgeon’s Life: Autonomy, Outcomes, and Being a Present Mom Titelbild

Inside a Facial Plastic Surgeon’s Life: Autonomy, Outcomes, and Being a Present Mom

Inside a Facial Plastic Surgeon’s Life: Autonomy, Outcomes, and Being a Present Mom

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Dr. Lindsey Pennington shares how she built a focused facial rejuvenation practice, from non-linear training and constant skill refinement to managing complications with deep responsibility, while also working with her spouse and creating firm boundaries so she can be both an excellent surgeon and a present mom. Connect with Dr. Pennington HERE. Subscribe to Beauty Unveiled on Apple, Spotify, and YouTube. Schedule a consult with Dr. Sturm HERE. Follow Dr. Sturm on Facebook, Instagram, and TikTok! Key Takeaways 1. A surgical career can evolve unexpectedly, with mentors and exposure gradually pulling you toward facial plastics and cosmetic work.2. High-autonomy training and continual education give surgeons the confidence to narrow their practice to the procedures they love most.3. Strong results come from replaying cases, studying other surgeons, and treating every complication as an opportunity to improve.4. Deeply caring for patients is powerful but heavy, driving surgeons to show up through complications while making it harder to switch off at home.5. Working with a spouse can be a major asset when you understand each other’s work styles and intentionally leave boss mode at the door.6. Protecting family time requires proactive systems, like blocking school events early and setting nightly windows of undistracted presence.7. Long-term sustainability as a cosmetic surgeon and parent depends on emotional boundaries and life design as much as technical skill. Timestamped Overview 00:00 Introduction to Dr. Lindsey Pennington and her focus on facial rejuvenation, facelifts, and eyelids01:31 Early interest in rural family medicine, discovering neck anatomy in the operating room, and realizing surgery could be her path03:23 The impact of strong female mentors in ENT and the pediatric surgeon whose example pushed her into head and neck surgery05:23 End-of-residency burnout, a pivotal conversation with her program director, and choosing to pursue fellowship anyway06:53 Fellowship with high autonomy, trauma reconstruction, and first exposure to cosmetic private practice and injectables08:22 Launching her own practice while pregnant, learning business basics from scratch, and facing the gap in business education during training09:18 Growing with her patients from injections to surgery and gradually narrowing her work to the facial rejuvenation procedures she loves most12:06 Choosing cadaver labs and visiting other surgeons over traditional vacations, and why that still feels like fun to her13:12 Why no surgeon starts out amazing and how constant tweaking and evolution of technique lead to better outcomes over time14:12 The double-edged sword of perfectionism, replaying cases mentally, and losing sleep over fine surgical details17:14 Operating on other surgeons, handling complications personally, and seeing patients as often as needed until they are better18:45 Viewing complications as gifts that bring remarkable patients and new skills rather than only stress19:45 The emotional cost of taking patients home in her thoughts while trying to be fully present at dinner and kids’ activities21:10 Setting a yearly intention and focusing on building structures that allow two uninterrupted evening hours with her children21:50 Practical boundaries: clearing messages in the car, using staff as a buffer, and remaining reachable for true emergencies23:18 Feeling surgically in a groove and shifting energy toward being both the safest surgeon and a more present mother24:02 Navigating last-minute school events and the need to block important dates well in advance to reliably show up25:02 Letting family help with field trips while planning so she can share those experiences directly in the future25:44 Working with her spouse in the practice, the blessing-and-curse dynamic, and how their opposite work styles serve patients26:16 Using a work style assessment to understand staff and partner personas and how misalignment predicts burnout27:11 The one hole versus many holes metaphor that guides how she and her husband respect each other’s focus at work28:57 Learning to turn off Dr. Pennington when she gets home and respond as mommy instead of an operating room boss30:25 How her son is fascinated by the operating room while her daughter wants nothing to do with needles or blood31:24 Closing reflections on seeing the world through her children’s eyes and inviting listeners to connect with her practiceSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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