Listen to This: A Collective Poem

Listen to This
It reminded me of you.
It reminded me of me—
we’re not so different.
It reminded me of how we’ve been
feeling lately. It reminded me that I
have not been listening to you
properly. It reminded me that we’ve
not been listening to each other, properly
and maybe if we stopped,
paused and breathed
deeply, that could change. I
wish I could’ve remembered,
before the world was crashing into
us. I remembered that remembering
is an act of practice. Vulnerability, more
important than we know. Remembering
is an act of care. Born
out of our shared beginnings
and common vulnerabilities
in meter and in verse. Sometimes,
we remember what we wish
had happened. I wish
I heard you better.
Listen to this,
I need your help. And I
imagine that you need mine,
too. Listeners make pain and hardship
bearable. And it reminds us that we’re not
alone. Oh, how sweet
is your realness, your vulnerability.
How sweet it is to be
heard. And how sweet it is
to hear you and know you.
Sit with me as we
face adversity together.
Your presence is a privilege.
You welcome me, you embrace me. You
give me the courage to share.
Listen to this, for I believe
that we are all afraid.
And listen to this even
if it’s silence. I used to fear
silence, but now you make it sound sweet.
Every feeling
has clarity when you listen.
Listen to this, can you hear it?
Listen to this. It is the sound
of the sun on the pines.
Listen to this. It is the sound of a rainbow
being formed outside as we speak.
The rainbow has many colors and yet
we can still listen to it and see its beauty.
We are not so different
from the rainbow. We could be
an amalgamation of different
experiences. Listen to this.
–Spoken into collective being by the L&C Narrative Scribes, February 26, 2021
How does our experience—and delivery—of care change when we understand listening as an act of co-creation? To answer this question, Northwest Narrative Medicine Collaborative created Narrative Scribe Training, a new curriculum which builds on the narrative medicine practices of listening and witnessing. Signal & Noise: Scribing in the Margins and piloted in February 2021 with 66 Lewis & Clark undergraduate participants from public health, social science, and humanities courses. This poem was created in real-time as the final exercise in listening together. Participants were invited to contribute a line or a phrase until the whole was written.
Funded by a four-year grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, and housed at the Center for Community and Global Health, Narrative Scribe Training is part of the college’s community-based Healing Social Suffering through Narrative program and will be offered annually through 2024.
Community and Global Health is located in room 307 and 309 of JR Howard Hall on the Undergraduate Campus.
MSC: 25
email communityglobalHEAL@lclark.edu
voice 503-768-7636
Jerusha Detweiler-Bedell
Director
jerusha@lclark.edu
Carolyn L. Zook
Associate Director and Pre-Health Advisor
carolynzook@lclark.edu
Alexis Rehrmann
Community Engagement Coordinator
alexisr@lclark.edu
Community and Global Health
Lewis & Clark
615 S. Palatine Hill Road
Portland OR 97219
More Stories

Immersive Learning
How Migrant Stories Are Told
A new course, Playing at the Border: Migration and Art, examines how migrant and refugee stories are told in film, theatre, and visual art, providing students with opportunities to engage directly with Portland’s immigrant communities.

Come to Narrative Medicine Skills Training!
With support from the Mellon Foundation, Northwest Narrative Medicine Collaborative (NWNMC) is developing Narrative Medicine Skills Training.
Narrative Medicine Skills Training introduces the narrative medicine principles of attention, representation, and affiliation and develops participant skills of listening and witnessing. We will reflect on how listening and witnessing can be applied to stories of health, illness and healing in diverse healthcare settings to improve care and support healing.
Training is open to students, health professionals, faculty, staff and community members– anyone curious about the practice of narrative medicine.
Narrative Medicine Skills Training
Saturday, February, 22
8:45-3:30
in-person and on-campus
Smith Hall
Lewis & Clark College
Register Here

Health Coverage: How Potential Providence Strike Impacts Patients
Carolyn Zook, Associate Director at the L&C Center for Community and Global Health is featured in this KGW8 story on the possibility of healthcare strikes in Oregon. She shares her expertise alongside L&C Law School Prof. Keith Cunningham-Parmeter
WATCH HERE

Experiential Learning
Health + Humanities Internships = Impact
The Center for Community and Global Health offers funding for health and humanities internships with Portland-area partners. Whether over the summer or during the school year, L&C students benefit from paid internships that turn career exploration into action.