On January 6, 2024, I retired from medicine and set out to enjoy a year of invention, adventure, and reflection before spinning up another incarnation of myself, Scott Mclean – the writer. One thing I learned in that impostor syndrome loves rebirth. Though I may tempestuously declare that I am a writer, in the still moments between breaths I’m not so sure. But I now have the freedom, in the waning quartiles of my animated version of stardust, to not worry too much about not being sure.
At this inflection point, the mandate is a moral one. To find the best words to describe the truth, the biology, the altruism, the greed, the abnegation, the search for the right word; to heft the ethical weight when the terms are appropriately light or lite or insufferable and ponderous. I’m counting on finding a glide path of work and sweat and worry. The success, secret. The elation, optional.
The other morning at Lander Coffee in Tacoma in the corner by the window a man sat with three notebooks in a stack and a pen and a three-mile stare. Beyond the plate-glass window and into the dark wet streets, he was thinking, caught short by two or three of his ideas in a dog fight.
In the opposite corner sat an artist with a fine-tipped pen – a stylus – etching intricacies and grace notes for ink drawings, portraits when I cautiously looked closer. A folding light illuminated a focal point the size of his fist. His eyes peered through 4 inches of photons to the clear vision of what spoke to his hands and heart.
The religious and secular holiday season at this moment is ending, with legions of 3rd graders mourning tomorrow’s early morn, commuters steady at the wheel, winter storms a lashing, and program managers tachycardic with anxiety about deliverables that are all but deliverable. My wife and I plan to ski Whistler and Blackcomb mountains by the time you have poured your second cup of coffee.
This is my last blog about my Gap Year. Learned a lot. Thanks to all 23 of my regular readers for following the journey. No neat and tidy ending, no aphorism about my alchemical transmutation. There’s nothing wrong with base metals, anyway.

Thank you, Scott, for sharing your thoughts and experiences. Best wishes to you for the new year and the future. Keep writing…
Phil Roe
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Scott, didn’t know you had retired! Sounds like you had a wonderful adventure this year!!
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Hi Cyndi! I missed ACMG last year but will go to the LA meeting in March. Catch up?
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Scott, congratulations on your 1 year anniversary of retirement. I hope that you have thoroughly enjoyed your internal and external explorations. Best of everything in your future!
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