I am sure almost everyone would have read the speech below by Dr Richard Teo, a successful aesthetic practitioner from Singapore who passed away on 18/10/2012 after battling with lung cancer for almost 18 months, at the age of 40. Over the last 18 months, he learned the true meaning of life and went around giving talks to everyone including university students, church etc. Everyone should read this speech and thus I thought I would publish it in my blog for the younger generation as well as for my generations. Many of the issues that he mentioned has been mentioned by me many times before.
Remember what I wrote when Dr Koh’s (a successful cosmetic physician) son fell to his death few months ago, here and here . I remember telling people that money can’t buy everything and DON”T let money buy over you! Over the last few months, I got a lot of questions about aesthetic medicine. Everyone seem to be jumping into this bandwagon simply because of MONEY!! It is survival. Many doctors out there are struggling to earn a luxury life and thus finding ways to earn more money. This is what happened to Dr Richard Teo as well. Many asked for my opinion.
My answer : are you going to become a glorified beautician or a TRUE doctor? Aesthetic is not medicine, as far as I am concerned. Medicine is about treating diseases, preventing diseases and giving comfort and care to patients. It is NOT about beautifying people and making them “look” young BUT still rotting beneath! You cannot cheat ageing or death! Hippocrates and Sir William Osler will be crying in their graves! If your true intention in doing medicine is to “save lives and help people”, than you would not even think about aesthetic medicine. That’s the truth.
Please read the highlighted sentences in this speech below. Remember that once I wrote : “ethical doctors do not earn much but an unethical doctor will be laughing to the banks”. Please read here .That’s exactly what Dr Richard Teo mentioned:
“Patients were just a source of income, and I tried to squeeze every single cent out of these patients.
A lot of times we forget, whom we are supposed to be serving. We become so lost that we serve nobody else but just ourselves. That was what happened to me. Whether it is in the medical, the dental fraternity, I can tell you, right now in the private practice, sometimes we just advise patients on treatment that is not indicated. Grey areas. And even though it is not necessary, we kind of advocate it. Even at this point, I know who are my friends and who genuinely cared for me and who are the ones who try to make money out of me by selling me “hope”. We kind of lose our moral compass along the way. Because we just want to make money. “
I hope everyone will look back and ask yourself again ” why you wanted to become a doctor” . Never do medicine for money, glamour, good life and future. Do medicine for the right reasons…………………….
Below is the transcript of the talk of Dr. Richard Teo, who is a 40-year-old millionaire and cosmetic surgeon with a stage-4 lung cancer but selflessly came to share with the D1 class his life experience on 19-Jan-2012. He has just passed away few days ago on 18 October 2012.
Not only do I need to go to the top school, I need to have success in all fields. Uniform groups, track, everything. I needed to get trophies, needed to be successful, I needed to have colours award, national colours award, everything. So I was highly competitive since young. I went on to medical school, graduated as a doctor. Some of you may know that within the medical faculty, ophthalmology is one of the most highly sought after specialities. So I went after that as well. I was given a traineeship in ophthalmology, I was also given a research scholarship by NUS to develop lasers to treat the eye.
So in the process, I was given 2 patents, one for the medical devices, and another for the lasers. And you know what, all this academic achievements did not bring me any wealth. So once I completed my bond with MOH, I decided that this is taking too long, the training in eye surgery is just taking too long. And there’s lots of money to be made in the private sector. If you’re aware, in the last few years, there is this rise in aesthetic medicine. Tons of money to be made there. So I decided, well, enough of staying in institution, it’s time to leave. So I quit my training halfway and I went on to set up my aesthetic clinic… in town, together with a day surgery centre.
You know the irony is that people do not make heroes out average GP (general practitioner), family physicians. They don’t. They make heroes out of people who are rich and famous. People who are not happy to pay $20 to see a GP, the same person have no qualms paying ten thousand dollars for a liposuction, 15 thousand dollars for a breast augmentation, and so on and so forth. So it’s a no brainer isn’t? Why do you want to be a gp? Become an aesthetic physician. So instead of healing the sick and ill, I decided that I’ll become a glorified beautician. So, business was good, very good. It started off with waiting of one week, then became 3weeks, then one month, then 2 months, then 3 months. I was overwhelmed; there were just too many patients. Vanities are fantastic business. I employed one doctor, the second doctor, the 3rd doctor, the 4th doctor. And within the 1st year, we’re already raking in millions. Just the 1st year. But never is enough because I was so obsessed with it. I started to expand into Indonesia to get all the rich Indonesian tai-tais who wouldn’t blink an eye to have a procedure done. So life was really good.
So what do I do with the spare cash. How do I spend my weekends? Typically, I’ll have car club gatherings. I take out my track car, with spare cash I got myself a track car. We have car club gatherings. We’ll go up to Sepang in Malaysia. We’ll go for car racing. And it was my life. With other spare cash, what do i do? I get myself a Ferrari. At that time, the 458 wasn’t out, it’s just a spider convertible, 430. This is a friend of mine, a schoolmate who is a forex trader, a banker. So he got a red one, he was wanting all along a red one, I was getting the silver one.
So what do I do after getting a car? It’s time to buy a house, to build our own bungalows. So we go around looking for a land to build our own bungalows, we went around hunting. So how do i live my life? Well, we all think we have to mix around with the rich and famous. This is one of the Miss Universe. So we hang around with the beautiful, rich and famous. This by the way is an internet founder. So this is how we spend our lives, with dining and all the restaurants and Michelin Chefs you know.
So I reach a point in life that I got everything for my life. I was at the pinnacle of my career and all. That’s me one year ago in the gym and I thought I was like, having everything under control and reaching the pinnacle.
Well, I was wrong. I didn’t have everything under control. About last year March, I started to develop backache in the middle of nowhere. I thought maybe it was all the heavy squats I was doing. So I went to SGH, saw my classmate to do an MRI, to make sure it’s not a slipped disc or anything. And that evening, he called me up and said that we found bone marrow replacement in your spine. I said, sorry what does that mean? I mean I know what it means, but I couldn’t accept that. I was like “Are you serious?” I was still running around going to the gym you know. But we had more scans the next day, PET scans – positrons emission scans, they found that actually I have stage 4 terminal lung cancer. I was like “Whoa where did that come from?” It has already spread to the brain, the spine, the liver and the adrenals. And you know one moment I was there, totally thinking that I have everything under control, thinking that I’ve reached the pinnacle of my life. But the next moment, I have just lost it.
This is a CT scan of the lungs itself. If you look at it, every single dot there is a tumour. We call this miliaries tumour. And in fact, I have tens of thousands of them in the lungs. So, I was told that even with chemotherapy, that I’ll have about 3-4months at most. Did my life come crushing on, of course it did, who wouldn’t? I went into depression, of course, severe depression and I thought I had everything.
See the irony is that all these things that I have, the success, the trophies, my cars, my house and all. I thought that brought me happiness. But i was feeling really down, having severe depression. Having all these thoughts of my possessions, they brought me no joy. The thought of… You know, I can hug my Ferrari to sleep, no… No, it is not going to happen. It brought not a single comfort during my last ten months. And I thought they were, but they were not true happiness. But it wasn’t. What really brought me joy in the last ten months was interaction with people, my loved ones, friends, people who genuinely care about me, they laugh and cry with me, and they are able to identify the pain and suffering I was going through. That brought joy to me, happiness. None of the things I have, all the possessions, and I thought those were supposed to bring me happiness. But it didn’t, because if it did, I would have felt happy think about it, when I was feeling most down..
You know the classical Chinese New Year that is coming up. In the past, what do I do? Well, I will usually drive my flashy car to do my rounds, visit my relatives, to show it off to my friends. And I thought that was joy, you know. I thought that was really joy. But do you really think that my relatives and friends, whom some of them have difficulty trying to make ends meet, that will truly share the joy with me? Seeing me driving my flashy car and showing off to them? No, no way. They won’t be sharing joy with me. They were having problems trying to make ends meet, taking public transport. In fact i think, what I have done is more like you know, making them envious, jealous of all I have. In fact, sometimes even hatred.
Those are what we call objects of envy. I have them, I show them off to them and I feel it can fill my own pride and ego. That didn’t bring any joy to these people, to my friends and relatives, and I thought they were real joy.
Well, let me just share another story with you. You know when I was about your age, I stayed in king Edward VII hall. I had this friend whom I thought was strange. Her name is Jennifer, we’re still good friends. And as I walk along the path, she would, if she sees a snail, she would actually pick up the snail and put it along the grass patch. I was like why do you need to do that? Why dirty your hands? It’s just a snail. The truth is she could feel for the snail. The thought of being crushed to death is real to her, but to me it’s just a snail. If you can’t get out of the pathway of humans then you deserve to be crushed, it’s part of evolution isn’t it? What an irony isn’t it?
There I was being trained as a doctor, to be compassionate, to be able to empathise; but I couldn’t. As a house officer, I graduated from medical school, posted to the oncology department at NUH. And, every day, every other day I witness death in the cancer department. When I see how they suffered, I see all the pain they went through. I see all the morphine they have to press every few minutes just to relieve their pain. I see them struggling with their oxygen breathing their last breath and all. But it was just a job. When I went to clinic every day, to the wards every day, take blood, give the medication but was the patient real to me? They weren’t real to me. It was just a job, I do it, I get out of the ward, I can’t wait to get home, I do my own stuff.
Was the pain, was the suffering the patients went through real? No. Of course I know all the medical terms to describe how they feel, all the suffering they went through. But in truth, I did not know how they feel, not until I became a patient. It is until now; I truly understand how they feel. And, if you ask me, would I have been a very different doctor if I were to re-live my life now, I can tell you yes I will. Because I truly understand how the patients feel now. And sometimes, you have to learn it the hard way.
Even as you start just your first year, and you embark this journey to become dental surgeons, let me just challenge you on two fronts.
Inevitably, all of you here will start to go into private practice. You will start to accumulate wealth. I can guarantee you. Just doing an implant can bring you thousands of dollars, it’s fantastic money. And actually there is nothing wrong with being successful, with being rich or wealthy, absolutely nothing wrong. The only trouble is that a lot of us like myself couldn’t handle it.
Why do I say that? Because when I start to accumulate, the more I have, the more I want. The more I wanted, the more obsessed I became. Like what I showed you earlier on, all I can was basically to get more possessions, to reach the pinnacle of what society did to us, of what society wants us to be. I became so obsessed that nothing else really mattered to me. Patients were just a source of income, and I tried to squeeze every single cent out of these patients.
A lot of times we forget, whom we are supposed to be serving. We become so lost that we serve nobody else but just ourselves. That was what happened to me. Whether it is in the medical, the dental fraternity, I can tell you, right now in the private practice, sometimes we just advise patients on treatment that is not indicated. Grey areas. And even though it is not necessary, we kind of advocate it. Even at this point, I know who are my friends and who genuinely cared for me and who are the ones who try to make money out of me by selling me “hope”. We kind of lose our moral compass along the way. Because we just want to make money.
Worse, I can tell you, over the last few years, we bad mouth our fellow colleagues, our fellow competitors in the industry. We have no qualms about it. So if we can put them down to give ourselves an advantage, we do it. And that’s what happening right now, medical, dental everywhere. My challenge to you is not to lose that moral compass. I learnt it the hard way, I hope you don’t ever have to do it.
Secondly, a lot of us will start to get numb to our patients as we start to practise. Whether is it government hospitals, private practice, I can tell you when I was in the hospital, with stacks of patient folders, I can’t wait to get rid of those folders as soon as possible; I can’t wait to get patients out of my consultation room as soon as possible because there is just so many, and that’s a reality. Because it becomes a job, a very routine job. And this is just part of it. Do I truly know how the patient feels back then? No, I don’t. The fears and anxiety and all, do I truly understand what they are going through? I don’t, not until when this happens to me and I think that is one of the biggest flaws in our system.
We’re being trained to be healthcare providers, professional, and all and yet we don’t know how exactly they feel. I’m not asking you to get involved emotionally, I don’t think that is professional but do we actually make a real effort to understand their pain and all? Most of us won’t, alright, I can assure you. So don’t lose it, my challenge to you is to always be able to put yourself in your patient’s shoes.
Because the pain, the anxiety, the fear are very real even though it’s not real to you, it’s real to them. So don’t lose it and you know, right now I’m in the midst of my 5th cycle of my chemotherapy. I can tell you it’s a terrible feeling. Chemotherapy is one of those things that you don’t wish even your enemies to go through because it’s just suffering, lousy feeling, throwing out, you don’t even know if you can retain your meals or not. Terrible feeling! And even with whatever little energy now I have, I try to reach out to other cancer patients because I truly understand what pain and suffering is like. But it’s kind of little too late and too little.
You guys have a bright future ahead of you with all the resource and energy, so I’m going to challenge you to go beyond your immediate patients. To understand that there are people out there who are truly in pain, truly in hardship. Don’t get the idea that only poor people suffer. It is not true. A lot of these poor people do not have much in the first place, they are easily contented. for all you know they are happier than you and me but there are out there, people who are suffering mentally, physically, hardship, emotionally, financially and so on and so forth, and they are real. We choose to ignore them or we just don’t want to know that they exist.
So do think about it alright, even as you go on to become professionals and dental surgeons and all. That you can reach out to these people who are in need. Whatever you do can make a large difference to them. I’m now at the receiving end so I know how it feels, someone who genuinely care for you, encourage and all. It makes a lot of difference to me. That’s what happens after treatment. I had a treatment recently, but I’ll leave this for another day. A lot of things happened along the way, that’s why I am still able to talk to you today.
I’ll just end of with this quote here, it’s from this book called Tuesdays with Morris, and some of you may have read it. Everyone knows that they are going to die; every one of us knows that. The truth is, none of us believe it because if we did, we will do things differently. When I faced death, when I had to, I stripped myself off all stuff totally and I focused only on what is essential. The irony is that a lot of times, only when we learn how to die then we learn how to live. I know it sounds very morbid for this morning but it’s the truth, this is what I’m going through.
Don’t let society tell you how to live. Don’t let the media tell you what you’re supposed to do. Those things happened to me. And I led this life thinking that these are going to bring me happiness. I hope that you will think about it and decide for yourself how you want to live your own life. Not according to what other people tell you to do, and you have to decide whether you want to serve yourself, whether you are going to make a difference in somebody else’s life. Because true happiness doesn’t come from serving yourself. I thought it was but it didn’t turn out that way.
Also most importantly, I think true joy comes from knowing God. Not knowing about God – I mean, you can read the bible and know about God – but knowing God personally; getting a relationship with God. I think that’s the most important. That’s what I’ve learnt.
So if I were to sum it up, I’d say that the earlier we sort out the priorities in our lives, the better it is. Don’t be like me – I had no other way. I had to learn it through the hard way. I had to come back to God to thank Him for this opportunity because I’ve had 3 major accidents in my past – car accidents. You know, these sports car accidents – I was always speeding , but somehow I always came out alive, even with the car almost being overturned. And I wouldn’t have had a chance. Who knows, I don’t know where else I’d be going to! Even though I was baptised it was just a show, but the fact that this has happened, it gave me a chance to come back to God.
Few things I’d learnt though:
1. Trust in the Lord your God with all your heart – this is so important.
2. Is to love and serve others, not just ourselves.
There is nothing wrong with being rich or wealthy. I think it’s absolutely alright, cos God has blessed. So many people are blessed with good wealth, but the trouble is I think a lot of us can’t handle it. The more we have, the more we want. I’ve gone through it, the deeper the hole we dig, the more we get sucked into it, so much so that we worship wealth and lose focus. Instead of worshipping God, we worship wealth. It’s just a human instinct. It’s just so difficult to get out of it.
We are all professionals, and when we go into private practise, we start to build up our wealth – inevitably. So my thought are, when you start to build up wealth and when the opportunity comes, do remember that all these things don’t belong to us. We don’t really own it nor have rights to this wealth. It’s actually God’s gift to us. Remember that it’s more important to further His Kingdom rather than to further ourselves.
Anyway I think that I’ve gone through it, and I know that wealth without God is empty. It is more important that you fill up the wealth, as you build it up subsequently, as professionals and all, you need to fill it up with the wealth of God.
this is a good true story..sometimes it makes me wonder what im doing..serve the people or myself..
first you serve yourself, when cancer strikes you,then you can serve people.you just want people to acknowledge that you are a good person before you die.dying changes everything.hope people understand sarcasm
Hello doctor,
i am an avid reader of your blog. i read the story above and it made me ponder about our career choices. i just completed my A levels and as usual being coerced into medicine currently. Even after my spm results was announced the immediate choice was medicine or engineering. but my only true passion is teaching. i had always wanted to be a lecturer. i have been tutoring my juniors since i am form 4 to earn pocket money and found my passion through that. but society seems to look low about the noble profession. when i told them i wanted to take applied science course majoring in biotech, everybody laughed at me. more than half of my classmates are doing medicine and engineering now to secure prosperous future. even my own teacher told me that i should push away my passion and think about the reality. how much will i earn as a teacher? only 2000. i am constantly being reminded about my future salary than my future life. now, i am just sitting at home doing part time tutoring after rejecting my offer for medicine in aucms and chem engineering in utp. even during our school days, the only career we all know is doctor,lawyer. and engineer. there is always a prejudice that only these 3 careers are the best. i am totally confused with what i should do, whether to go with my passion or with the flow. please give me your view doctor. thank you.
Why don’t you do. Chemical engineering and then become a lecture or school teacher?
http://pagalavan.com
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Thank you for your reply doctor. i do not see myself able to study chemical engineering as my physics is just average. B in my A levels. however i obtained good grades in other three science subjects. does A level grades provide good reference for our degree choices? what is your view doctor?
A B for physics is good enough. You don’t need a A to do chemical engineering. A levels gives you a guide on what you are capable of doing but does not mean you need to do something that others want you to do.
School teacher? I read in the news many could not get a place to teach after their training. Dr Paga, I do remember your blog did mention something like graduates from teaching colleges could not get places to teach in the government schools.
Yes, the government gives preference to public university graduates and their own sponsored teachers. The rest comes after that. That’s the reason why many from private colleges/universities are unable to get a teaching job. BUT you can become a teacher in private schools, international schools and even Pre-U colleges. There seem to be mushrooming of international schools lately as the government has removed the quota for locals.
Thank you for your reply doctor.
Gary, follow your heart and be a teacher/ lecturer. We need passionate people like you to mould the next generation. You might make a good engineer, or a good doctor, but you WILL be an even BETTER teacher, and you will feel happy. I am a doctor and I have great respect for the teaching profession, muh more than my fellow doctor colleague sometimes. You will be able to secure employment as a teacher. If you feel that the salary offered by the goverment sector is too low, you can always venture into private or higher education. You have to feel secure about yourself and be brave to pursue your own dream. Don’t go into something because everyone else is doing it, or that everyone else thinks that u should so it. Before i started medicine, i did 6 months of engineering, a subject i loath but did it anyway because i was offered a scholarship, and i cannot describe to you how much it was a torture to me and how depressed i was then. i quit, followed my dream and did medicine instead, and i have no regret since. In other countries, teachers have to be graduate first, and it is very competitive to get into teacher’s training programme. I hope some educationists in malaysia will push malaysia towards this direction. If it doesn’t happen, I and my children are going to rely on people like yourself to do it! So, go for it!
The funny thing is Dr. Richard just found ‘purpose of life’ after some huge calamities in his life. If his life is as smooth sailing as Dr. Pagalavan’s plus the money he got, I don’t think all this will be surfacing.
Very true, that’s why you won;t see those millionaire private doctors who owns the flashy sport cars come out to advise others that people should not emphasize just money! This is human instinct, human is always lured by lust on money. This is made worse by the society who worship the rich and famous like what Dr Richard said.
I wonder how do you know that my life is smooth sailing? Do you know me? I don’t mention what I have gone throu before in my life but trust me, I have gone throu a lot of challenges in my life since I was small.
No, what I really meant was you don’t have cancer.
I remember when I was young, which is more than 25 years ago now, my mum went to see a gynaecologist. The gynaecologist said my mum had a cancerous growth which had to be removed. My mum cried for 3 days until my father said we must get a second opinion. We got 2nd and 3rd opinion and both doctors said everything was okay. Later we heard many allegations that the gynaecololgist was into unethical practices and dabbled heavily in shares. He was a dashing high flying doctor who had a very lucrative business but his reputation caught up with him and his business suffered. He closed his practice and I didnt hear about him until he was charged in Johore for a birth certificate scam not too long ago. He was in handcuffs when he appeared in court and I showed my mum his picture in the newspapers. He looked pretty pathetic. I said “mum, this is the man who said you had cancer”. I looked up his credentials from the medical registry and found out that he graduated from a top university in UK. What a real waste of talent and medical education.
Yes, when you do medicine for wrong reasons.
yt, as people say:
“What goes around, comes around”
And he found GOD in his last 18 months. Not sure if he is qualified to ask us to believe in GOD since I think he hardly knew HIM. It is typical of many dying people to realized that money is not everything and quote GOD in many things and eventually surrenders when the inevitable comes. After all, a drowning man will hold on to a blade of grass in the futile hope that the grass will provide enough buoyancy.
He was passionate in making money. He did not practiced medicine and many of his clients were not patients; just a pot of money being sucked dry by a machine. Medicine was only a means to that.
Dr Paga has always advocated that those not passionate in medicine do not become doctors. People like Dr Teo will not be the first nor the last. Many are still chasing the same dreams(through unscrupulous means), especially our politicians.
Anyway, RIP Dr Teo.
Hi, lately there are numerous alternative complementary treatment available in the market such as Ozone therapy which is becoming a hit among the certain group of Malaysian. Anyone have opinion regarding this treatment? What it is really about ? Will it harmful to the patient ? and how come the MOH did not do anything about this therapy in the market ?
I have written about this before. Pls read under ‘how desperate have doctors become……….’.
MMC has issued a warning last year that action can be taken against doctors caught advocating ozone therapy etc. however, MMC only acts when there is a complain. You can lodge a complain to the state UKAPS unit if any doctor claiming they can cure a patient’s disease with ozone therapy. There is NO evidence to this claim.
Sorry, put the comment under wrong article. Could you please delete this comment. Thanks
Everyone takes life for granted whether it is Dr Richard or myself or my neighbour or even yourself. Life is like a dream, the clock turns round once for that day and will never return again. There is no playback nor is there a replay. Always enjoy what you are doing and do it with passion…Never regret what happened and use past as an experience to teach your future. Whatever course one decides and what ever life you lead hence, enjoy and finally when you have had enough return back to the society….This what I find great people LIke Stephen Jobs, despite his short life.. reluctant to die had enjoyed what he did…
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