Let me ask you something.
Have you ever felt completely fine about your life until you saw what another doctor was doing?
You’re scrolling for a few minutes. Or you overhear a conversation in the physician lounge about someone cutting back to part-time, launching a business, buying another property, or stepping away from medicine entirely. And all of a sudden, something shifts internally.
Five minutes earlier, your life felt solid. Maybe not perfect, but steady. Then you start doing the math in your head. Are they making more than me? Working less? Did they figure something out that I missed?
It’s amazing how quickly your own life can feel smaller just because you saw a glimpse of someone else’s.
I wanted to write about this because I don’t think comparison is just a social media problem. For physicians, it runs much deeper than that.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, legal, or investment advice. Any investment involves risk, and you should consult your financial advisor, attorney, or CPA before making any investment decisions. Past performance is not indicative of future results. The author and associated entities disclaim any liability for loss incurred as a result of the use of this material or its content.
Medicine Trained Us to Compare
If we’re honest, this didn’t start with Instagram.
From the moment we entered medicine, we were measured against other people. Class rank mattered. Board scores mattered. Where you matched for residency mattered. What fellowship you landed mattered. Later it became RVUs, compensation surveys, titles, publications.
Medicine is basically one long ladder. There’s always another rung, and there’s always someone slightly above you.
When you spend a decade or more in that system, you start to internalize something subtle. You begin to believe your value is relative. Not intrinsic, but relative. You’re doing well if you’re ahead of someone. You’re behind if someone else is doing better.
That mindset doesn’t disappear when training ends. It just changes arenas.
Now the comparison isn’t about board scores. It’s about who built more passive income, who exited a company, who works two days a week, who retired at 45. It’s about who reached financial freedom first and who seems to have unlocked more time.
And because we’re wired to achieve, it doesn’t always feel toxic. It feels like motivation. It feels productive.
But most of the time, it’s just noise that quietly erodes your contentment.
You’re Comparing Outcomes Without Context
One of the biggest problems with comparison is that we compare outcomes without context.
You see the physician who stepped away from clinical work. What you don’t see are the years of anxiety before making that decision, the conversations with their spouse, the capital they started with, or the risk tolerance they have that you may not share.
You see the doctor who built a seven-figure business. You don’t see the failed attempts before that, the strain it may have put on their family, or the trade-offs they accepted along the way.
You might see someone decide they’ve hit their passive income goal and walk away from practice, but you don’t see the years of uncertainty that came before it.
Every path comes with a cost. Comparison conveniently hides that cost.
I’ve had private conversations with doctors who look wildly successful from the outside. People others would easily compare themselves to. Behind closed doors, some of them are exhausted. Some are disconnected from their families. Some feel trapped in a different way.
There is no path without trade-offs. But when we compare, we assume someone else’s visible outcome represents the full picture. It never does.
Ambition Isn’t the Problem
Let me be clear about something. This isn’t about killing ambition.
I believe deeply in growth. I believe in building income streams, reclaiming time, creating optionality in a system that often feels unstable. That’s the whole point of Passive Income MD.
Ambition is not the problem.
The problem is reactive ambition.
There’s a difference between building something because it aligns with your values and building something because someone else made you feel behind.
If you’re investing because you want more time with your kids, that’s aligned. If you’re creating a business because you want more control and true career freedom, that’s intentional.
If you’re exploring new streams of passive income because you want options in an uncertain system, that’s strategic.
But if you’re chasing a milestone because someone else hit it and it triggered something in you, that usually doesn’t feel peaceful even when you achieve it.
I’ve hit financial goals that once felt huge to me. And I remember the strange feeling of looking up after reaching them and almost immediately shifting to the next benchmark. Instead of feeling settled, I felt restless.
That’s when I realized that comparison doesn’t just steal joy. It moves the finish line.
Contentment Requires Presence
Here’s what I’ve learned the hard way. Comparison and contentment don’t coexist very well.
Contentment requires you to be present in your own life. Comparison pulls you into someone else’s.
When you’re constantly evaluating whether you’re ahead or behind, you’re not fully living your own season. You’re mentally living in someone else’s trajectory.
And physicians are especially vulnerable to this because we’re used to optimization. We’re used to asking, “How do I do this better? Faster? More efficiently?”
But life isn’t just something to optimize. It’s something to experience.
You can pursue growth and still appreciate where you are. You can build wealth and still enjoy dinner with your family. You can invest thoughtfully even in seasons of real estate market uncertainty without letting it dominate your identity.
You can build something outside of medicine and still learn to balance your medical career and a side hustle in a sustainable way.
Gratitude doesn’t weaken ambition. It stabilizes it.
Defining “Enough”
I think one of the most important exercises for physicians is defining what “enough” actually means.
Enough income. Enough work. Enough time.
Most of us never stop to answer that. We just keep climbing because that’s what we’ve always done.
Better training. Better job. Higher pay. More investments.
But if you don’t define enough, comparison will define it for you. And comparison has no ceiling. There will always be another doctor earning more, working less, exiting bigger.
We’ve all seen high earners who still feel financially behind. That’s why it’s worth remembering that high income doesn’t automatically create financial freedom.
At some point, you have to decide what kind of life actually fits you in this season.
When my kids were younger, time flexibility mattered more to me than maximizing every dollar of growth. That might change later. Seasons shift. But if I had only chased what looked impressive from the outside, I would have missed moments that mattered to me deeply.
That’s why the better question isn’t, “Am I ahead?” It’s, “Does this life fit me?”

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If You Feel Behind
If you’ve been feeling behind lately, I want you to pause.
Behind according to who?
You have a different risk tolerance. A different family dynamic. A different energy capacity. A different definition of fulfillment.
Instead of asking whether someone else is ahead, ask yourself what trade-offs you’re willing to make in this season. Ask yourself what actually matters most right now.
Because the goal isn’t to win at comparison.
The goal is to design a life that feels meaningful when you’re actually living it.
There will always be another physician doing something bigger, faster, or flashier. If you go looking for comparison, you’ll find it every time.
But you might not need a better life.
You might just need to see the one you already have more clearly.
And then build from there.
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Peter Kim, MD is the founder of Passive Income MD, the creator of Passive Real Estate Academy, and offers weekly education through his Monday podcast, the Passive Income MD Podcast. Join our community at the Passive Income Doc Facebook Group.
