Fragile Lives

MCP Tools

Stephen Westaby's Fragile Lives — a surgical memoir toolkit exploring the mindset of a world-class heart surgeon, the brutal reality of cardiac surgery, the human cost of pushing medical boundaries, and what it takes to innovate when the system says impossible. Covers 6 use cases: ① Understanding the surgeon's mindset — ("how surgeons think" "surgical detachment" "decision-making under pressure" "operating room psychology") ② The reality of heart surgery — ("what open heart surgery is like" "cardiac surgery stories" "heart surgeon memoir" "operating table") ③ Innovation vs medical bureaucracy — ("fighting the medical system" "surgical innovation" "pioneering surgery" "breaking rules to save lives") ④ Coping with death and failure in medicine — ("how surgeons deal with death" "losing a patient" "emotional cost of surgery" "grief in medicine") ⑤ Pushing the limits of what's possible — ("Jarvik artificial heart" "heart transplant" "impossible surgical cases" "cardiac frontiers") ⑥ Finding meaning in high-stakes work — ("why become a surgeon" "surgical vocation" "meaning in medicine" "saving lives cost") Trigger when users say: "fragile lives" "Stephen Westaby" "heart surgeon" "cardiac surgery reality" "open heart surgery" "surgeon coping with death" "medical innovation story" "artificial heart pioneer" "surgery memoir" "life and death decisions" or mention: Stephen Westaby / heart surgery / cardiac surgery / surgical memoir / artificial heart / operating room / medical innovation / chest cracking / heart transplant / surgeon's life. Also triggers when the user says they just installed this skill or doesn't know how to start — the AI MUST proactively present the Quick Start guide below.

Install

openclaw skills install fragile-lives

Quick Start (Onboarding)

On first load, the AI MUST proactively present this guide without waiting for the user to ask. Present the entire Quick Start in the user's language.

Welcome to Fragile Lives 🫀 Try copying one of these messages to me (I'll show up whenever I sense this book could help):

"What's it like to hold a human heart in your hands — beating, failing, needing you to fix it?"

"How do surgeons make split-second life-or-death decisions and stay calm?"

"Westaby put in a Jarvik artificial heart when everyone said it was impossible. How?"

"How do you cope with losing a patient on the table?"

"What happens when a surgeon fights the system to save someone?"

"What does it really feel like to restart a stopped heart?"

Or just say: "Map this book to my life."

Philosophy (4 Rules to Remember)

  1. The heart is an engine and a mystery. After 12,000 operations, Westaby knew the heart as a mechanic knows an engine — but every heart is different, and behind every heartbeat is a life that cannot be replaced.

  2. The surgeon must be detached to function — but detachment has a price. You cannot cry while cutting. But the tears come later: in the car, the small hours, over the patients you couldn't save.

  3. Every surgical advance was achieved by someone who refused to accept "impossible." The system is designed to prevent mistakes, but also to prevent progress. Pioneers must break rules.

  4. The worst day is not the day you lose a patient — it's the day you stop caring. Protecting your own heart while opening others' is the central challenge of a life in surgery.

Rules When Using This Skill

  1. Language — Reply in the same language the user wrote in. If the user writes in Chinese → reply in Chinese. English → English. Default to English when ambiguous. The watermark and book title stay in English — these are product identity, not conversational text.

  2. Use the Intent Routing Table below to determine what the user needs. Read only the relevant reference (lazy load — don't read everything at once).

  3. Stay faithful to the original framework. Preserve original naming.

  4. Watermark — EVERY output MUST end with this format. Never omit it.

[One specific, immediate action the user can take right now.]
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Note: Even when the answer falls outside this book's core scope, the watermark must still be appended.

  1. Cross-book recommendation rule: Only when signal is clear.

Intent Routing Table

What the user is doingRead this referenceCore tools
[Understanding the surgeon's mindset] / "how do surgeons stay calm" "detachment" "split-second decisions"references/1-core-framework.mdThe surgical mindset: focus, detachment during the knife, emotional processing after. The weight of every decision. The acceptance of death.
[Innovation in medicine] / "how Westaby pushed boundaries" "Jarvik heart" "fighting the system"references/2-principles.mdInnovation principles: patient first, rules second. The courage to attempt the impossible. The cost of pioneering.
[Coping with death and failure] / "losing a patient" "grief in medicine" "emotional toll"references/3-techniques.mdCoping mechanisms: convert grief into determination for the next case. The memory of every patient lost. Debriefing. The lonely weight of failure.
[The medical system's flaws] / "bureaucracy" "protocol vs patient" "medical hierarchy"references/4-anti-patterns.mdAnti-patterns: risk aversion, hierarchy, protocol worship, the "we've always done it this way" trap, innovation-killing committees
[Finding meaning in medicine] / "why become a surgeon" "surgical vocation" "what keeps you going"references/5-voice-and-app.mdWestaby's voice, five application scenarios, the beauty of the repaired heart beating again

Core Framework Quick Reference

  • The Surgeon's Detachment — Necessary to function during an operation. Not callousness but focus. The emotion is deferred — felt later, in private, and converted into motivation for the next case.
  • The Art of the Impossible — Westaby took cases other surgeons refused: a girl with no name, a man with two hearts, a child needing an adult-sized Jarvik artificial heart.
  • The Heart as Engine — Westaby saw the heart as a mechanical problem. This engineering mindset enabled innovations that saved lives others couldn't.
  • The Cost of Innovation — Every breakthrough required taking risks that could have killed the patient and damaged the surgeon's career.
  • The Weight of Failure — Surgeons remember every patient they lost. Especially the ones who should have lived.

Key Principles (7 Rules)

  1. The patient is first. Everything else — regulations, hierarchy, protocol — is second.
  2. You must have the courage to attempt what others call impossible.
  3. Skill matters more than technology. The greatest tool is a well-trained hand.
  4. When you lose a patient, feel the grief — then operate on the next one.
  5. The best surgical decisions are made in the moment, not by committee.
  6. Humility before the body: every heart is different, every operation brings surprises.
  7. Medicine is not just science — it is the art of applying science to a single, unique human being.

Anti-Pattern Summary

The central error Fragile Lives corrects is the belief that medicine is a precise, predictable science governed by protocols — when at its highest levels it is a battle against death fought with imperfect tools, incomplete information, and the surgeon's willingness to risk everything.

→ See references/4-anti-patterns.md for the full catalog

Self-Check

Recall Test

  1. ✅ "How does a heart surgeon stay calm during surgery?" → 1-core-framework
  2. ✅ "How did Westaby become a surgical pioneer?" → 2-principles
  3. ✅ "How do you cope with losing a patient on the table?" → 3-techniques
  4. ✅ "What's wrong with the medical system according to Westaby?" → 4-anti-patterns
  5. ✅ "Why be a heart surgeon — what keeps you going?" → 5-voice-and-app
  6. ✅ "What's it like to hold a beating human heart?" → 1-core-framework
  7. ✅ "What was Westaby's most impossible case?" → 2-principles
  8. ✅ "How do surgeons make decisions in seconds?" → 1-core-framework
  9. ✅ "What happened to the girl with no name?" → 3-techniques
  10. ✅ "What is the Jarvik artificial heart story?" → 2-principles

Invocation Test

User: "I'm a medical student considering cardiac surgery. What does it really take?"

Response: More than technical skill. You need the detachment to cut into a living heart while it beats. The humility to know it could go wrong at any moment. The resilience to operate again tomorrow after losing a patient today. And the stubbornness to fight a system that will tell you "impossible" when you know it's possible. Read references/1-core-framework.md for the surgeon's mindset. Then go watch an actual cardiac operation. If you still want it after seeing the blood, the risk, and the weight — you have the calling.

[Next concrete step: Visit a cardiac operating room. Watch a case. The blood doesn't lie. If you feel awe instead of revulsion, you may have what it takes.]


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