This essay argues that boundary situations-moments when illness compels a person to confront the limits of bodily and existential integrity-form a shared space between patients and caregivers. By foregrounding illness narratives, we show how story-telling repersonalises clinical diagnosis and restores the subjective 'I' often eclipsed by medical classification. Narrative medicine, grounded in the medical humanities, invites learners and practitioners to acknowledge vulnerability as a mutual condition rather than a professional risk. We propose a didactic shift in which educators speak not only of patients but of people with lived illness experience, while recognising physicians as individuals shaped by the experience of caring. Such reciprocity fosters trust, counters the hidden curriculum that could undermine empathy and weaves humanity into professional identity. Ultimately, illness narratives reveal medicine as an encounter between two vulnerable subjects, where empathy emerges from shared authenticity.
Apondo et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
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