%0 Journal Article %T Care inside %J Archive of "Canadian Family Physician". %D 2017 %X As physicians, we are invited to bear witness to our patientsĄŻ lives. About 2 decades ago, I started sessional work in the health care clinic of a womenĄŻs correctional centre. The complex health profiles of incarcerated women, and their traumatic life stories, made the work both deeply rewarding and unsettling. I started journaling and writing poetry because I discovered that writing helped me to process the stories and traumas that the women shared with me. By writing poems, I found that I was giving voice to the moment of the clinical encounter, but I felt that I was viewing the moment through a different lens, as if compelled by an iridescent painting. I had not read the poems for many years, and re-reading them stirred up vivid memories of the clinical encounters that prompted my writing. Perhaps what we do in such settings is attend, bear witness, affirm, and allow healing to happen. Engaging with reflective writing, and the art of poetry, better prepared me as a physician to listen, to understand, and to learn from the women who shared their lives with me %U https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5395391/