Working in a rural primary health center in India taught me lessons that medical training never covered. Patients arrived with ordinary complaints, but beneath them were unspoken burdens shaped by gender, belief, poverty, and hierarchy. Over time, I discovered that cultural humility, learning to listen, and reflecting on my own limits became my most reliable tools. Although these experiences unfolded in a remote setting, the lessons hold meaning for clinical practice anywhere. In medicine, healing often begins where diagnosis and treatment end. Sometimes the most radical act is presence itself.
Dheeraj Sharma (Wed,) studied this question.