By: Candy Velez, CRDH, BSDH, IGNITEDDS Dental Hygiene Coach
The Desire Behind the Question
In coaching conversations, I often hear a version of the same desire. A doctor will say they want their schedule to feel less busy and more productive. They want more time to connect with patients. They want their days to feel calmer, more intentional, and more aligned with why they chose dentistry in the first place. It is an honest desire and a good one to have.
But the real question usually comes next:
“Are you willing to make the required changes and stay consistent long enough for your desire to become your new reality?”
This tension, wanting more space while feeling hesitant to create it, is the same pattern that shows up everywhere else in a dental practice.
Knowing Isn’t the Problem
Most dentists do not struggle with knowing what they want. They struggle with staying with change long enough for it to work. In dentistry, information is rarely the problem. Implementation is.
Transformation does not come from a new idea alone. It comes from allowing that idea to move through discomfort, resistance, and unfamiliarity until it becomes the new normal. Almost every meaningful improvement begins with discomfort, not because something is wrong, but because an old pattern is being interrupted.
When Discomfort Gets Mistaken for Failure
I see this constantly in dental practices. A new protocol is introduced. A scheduling adjustment is discussed. A different approach to communication is attempted. After a few uncomfortable moments, someone says, “This is not working,” or “This is not going to work.”
What they often mean is, “This feels unfamiliar.”
Unfamiliar does not mean ineffective. It means something different is being practiced. Most practices do not stall because the idea was wrong. They stall because discomfort was mistaken for failure.
Staying Long Enough for Change to Work
Sustainable growth, clinically, financially, and culturally, requires staying consistent through discomfort. Fear is usually part of the process. It means continuing to show up even when change feels awkward, unfinished, or slow.
This is where the real work begins, and it is also where most people stop.
Over time, what once felt difficult becomes familiar, and what once felt unfamiliar becomes the new normal. That is when it starts to feel easier. As Aristotle said,
“We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is not an act, but a habit.”
Excellence in dentistry is not created by a single great day or a new system. It is built through repeated, intentional choices.
The Truth About Creating a Calmer Schedule
When a doctor truly wants a calmer, more connected clinical day, something very specific must happen first. The schedule has to thin. Space has to be created. And the doctor has to become comfortable with that space before it feels productive.
That is often the hardest part.
Empty space can feel like something is missing. It can trigger fear, fear of lost production, fear of inefficiency, fear of doing something wrong. But empty space is not failure. It is the foundation.
You cannot create a spacious, intentional schedule while clinging to a packed one. You cannot create calm while protecting chaos. Space must exist before clarity can arrive.
Consistency Is the Differentiator
Once space is created, consistency becomes the true differentiator.
- Consistency in protecting time.
- Consistency in honoring clinical standards.
- Consistency in patient conversations.
- Consistency in following the same systems, even when it feels uncomfortable.
Not for a day. Not for a week. But long enough for the new rhythm to become normal.
The Same Rule Applies to Relationships
The same principle applies to relationships inside a practice. When there is tension, avoidance, or miscommunication, restoration rarely happens in a single perfectly worded conversation. More often, it unfolds through repeated moments of clarity, honesty, and follow-through.
Restoration only happens when consistency follows the conversation. Consistency in how you show up. Consistency in how you speak. Consistency in your tone, expectations, and actions. That consistency builds trust. It communicates, “I meant what I said,” and “This change was not temporary.”
What Are You Being Consistent With
It is worth pausing to ask:
What are you being consistent with right now, intentionally or unintentionally?
Because consistency always exists. The only question is whether your consistency reinforces what you want to build or what you are trying to outgrow.
Consistency is not loud. It is not flashy. It does not draw applause. But it quietly builds dental practices that feel stable, aligned, and fulfilling, for doctors, teams, and patients alike.
The Real Flex
The real flex in dentistry is not trying every new thing. The real flex is choosing systems that align with your values and staying with them through the uncomfortable middle. That is where transformation happens.
This is exactly why our one-year dental coaching program is built around consistency rather than quick fixes. Meaningful change in leadership, scheduling, team dynamics, and patient experience does not happen in a few weeks. It happens when support is present long enough for new habits to take root.
On the other side of consistency lies greater ease, greater confidence, and greater fulfillment. Not because it was easy, but because you stayed.
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