Welcome to the start of my 20th year of writing Tips and Topics. The first edition was published April 2003.
In SAVVY, this edition of Tips & Topics begins the 20th year of publication. I look back at what I’ve written before in three areas of bridge-building: Addiction as an illness – the general public and health care in general; Addiction and mental health – Co-Occurring Disorders; Justice and Treatment teams.
In SKILLS, it requires skillful bridge-building to attract people into lasting, accountable change, and cross the bridge from expecting compliance to treatment to collaborating in person-centered care planning: Start with what the person is at Action for, not what you are at Action for; Hold the participant accountable to their goal and track their engagement, good faith effort and outcomes.
In SOUL, this year is 50 years since I graduated from medical school and started my career. See my ASAM Educator of the Year award photo and video bio. Elon Musk is 50 years old. I’ve had a good career, but find out what drives Elon and what someone who was one year old when I started my career has achieved.
This month’s edition marks the beginning of the 20th year of Tips & Topics. In the very first edition in April 2003, I outlined why I started Tips & Topics. In the April 2004 edition at the beginning of the 2nd year, I wrote in SOUL a little background on why much of my career has focused on bringing together people and systems – addiction and mental health; therapists getting closer to clients as customers; helping teams resolve conflicts and build cohesion. I shared the mission statement I fashioned when I started my training and consulting practice:
I am actively creating a unique forum using my talents of bridging the gap for people between disparate fields and concepts, in a very persuasive, challenging and inspiring manner; simultaneously influencing systems in a global way for the greater good, with rich personal satisfaction and financial reward.
So at the beginning of the 20th year of Tips & Topics, I am looking back at three main “bridges” I have focused on in my career.
Tip 1
Bridging the gap between the public and healthcare’s view of addiction as willful misconduct to seeing addiction as a disease.
In the April 2018 edition, I covered:
In the August 2011 edition, I wrote about:
In the October 2020 edition, I addressed:
Tip 2
Building bridges between mental health and addiction treatment to better assess and treat co-occurring mental and substance use disorders.
In the December 2004 edition, I suggested in SAVVY:
In the May 2010 edition, I addressed in SAVVY:
In the July/August 2005 edition, I suggested:
In the June 2019 edition:
Tip 3
Bringing together justice and treatment teams to enhance accountable, lasting change in drug and treatment courts.
In the November 2007 edition I addressed:
In the September 2005 edition, I covered:
In the June 2018 edition I addressed:
In the September 2014 edition, I suggested:
In the March 2016 edition I addressed:
In the May 2017 edition, I covered questions that highlight conflicting perspectives on what is “addiction” and addiction treatment is:
To attract people into lasting, accountable change, it requires skillful bridge-building:
Tip 1
Start with what the person is at Action for, not what you are at Action for.
In the July/August 2007 edition, I suggested in SKILLS:
Tip 2
Hold the participant accountable to their goal and track their engagement, good faith effort and outcomes.
In the April 2019 edition I addressed:
This year, it will be 50 years since I graduated from medical school. In December 2021 I announced that the American Society of Addiction Medicine (ASAM) had awarded me the 2022 ASAM Educator of the Year Award that recognizes and honors an educator who has made outstanding contributions to ASAM’s addiction medicine education.
ASAM even reached out to colleagues to share a few words about me and produced a brief video Bio introduction just before the award. Too much work went into that video to have its first and last showing be at the conference.
So here, for your viewing pleasure, is that brief video!
Of course I am proud of and gratified by my 50 year career as a physician, psychiatrist and addiction specialist. But when I started my career 50 years ago, Elon Musk was one years old.
Elon Musk
The more “high profile” you are, the more detractors you attract. So whatever you think about Elon Musk, I invite you to hold judgement until you hear directly what Elon Musk has to say about who he is and why he does what he does.
I watched the hour plus interview by Chris Anderson, head of TED (as in TED Talks). I have never taken the time to listen and understand Elon. But as I watched the interview, I was impressed that his heart is in the right place and I marvel at how one man can execute so many mission-driven innovations so effectively.
In the interview “Musk details how the radical new innovations he’s working on — Tesla’s intelligent humanoid robot Optimus, SpaceX’s otherworldly Starship and Neuralink’s brain-machine interfaces, among others — could help maximize the lifespan of humanity and create a world where goods and services are abundant and accessible for all. It’s a compelling vision of a future worth getting excited about.”
It was recorded at the Tesla Texas Gigafactory on April 6, 2022, so this is hot off the press.
Chris Anderson asked Elon Musk (EM): “What drives you on a day-to-day basis to do what you do?”
EM: “I guess, like, I really want to make sure that there is a good future for humanity and that we’re on a path to understanding the nature of the universe, the meaning of life. Why are we here, how did we get here?….We must expand the scope and scale of consciousness……”
If you don’t have the time or interest to watch the whole interview (my recommendation) but want to dip into it, here is a minute by minute timeline of topics that you can fast forward to:
0:14 A future that’s worth getting excited about
2:44 The sustainable energy economy, batteries and 300 terawatt hours of installed capacity
7:06 “Humanity will solve sustainable energy.”
8:47 Artificial intelligence and Tesla’s progress on full self-driving cars
19:46 Tesla’s Optimus humanoid robot
21:46 “People have no idea, this is going to be bigger than the car.”
23:14 Avoiding an AI dystopia
26:39 The age of abundance
28:20 Neuralink and brain-machine interfaces
36:55 SpaceX’s Starship and the mission to build a city on Mars
46:54 “It’s the people of Mars’ city.”
50:14 What else can Starship do and help explore?
53:18 Possible synergies between Tesla, SpaceX, The Boring Company and Neuralink
54:44 Intercontinental travel via Starship
58:41 Being a billionaire
1:02:31 Philanthropy as love of humanity
1:03:39 Population collapse and birth rates as a threat to future of human civilization
1:04:13 Elon’s drive
1:06:06 “I think if you want the future to be good, you must make it so.”
So here I am 50 years since starting my medical career and here is Elon Musk just 50 years old. Both our careers have been mission-driven. But what Elon has achieved boggles my old mind. They say “The older you get, the less you know”. There’s some truth to that.