I'm good at multiple choice tests.
What I've found is that if I can turn a patient into a multiple choice question, then I can generally come up with the right answer. But my newest realization about patient care is that most of the time when the wrong decision has been made, it's a decision that you didn't know that you made.
When we have a choice, we choose right. But when we have momentum in a direction and no one is asking any questions; then we charge ahead without recognizing the number of decision that are being made without deliberate consideration. It's not until something goes wrong that can turn around and look back and saw, "Why didn't we do x, y or z? "
Maybe that's true in life too. I think that's what mid life crises might be about- all of the sudden you realize that you've made a bunch of decision without realizing it and are somewhere different than you should be. I'm going to start trying to recognize the impending "mid life crises" of patient care, and recognizing the slowly boiling pot of water that's about to cook the frog.