
Saying a person’s name, confirming pronouns, and clarifying why you are here together are deceptively small, trust-forming choices. They show presence and care, reduce guesswork, and prevent micro-frictions. Patients feel seen, not processed, when you honor identity and define how today’s time will help meet their goals.

Sitting at eye level slows the rush and communicates availability. Patients often perceive more time when you sit, even if the clock disagrees. A softened voice, unhurried posture, and a visible chair pulled close convey partnership, not hierarchy, and invite stories that might otherwise remain guarded or abbreviated.

Warmth matters most when it is free from presumption. Replace pet names with respectful forms of address. Ask, do not guess, about comfort with touch or physical exam steps. When warmth arrives with curiosity and consent, it eases fears, sets boundaries kindly, and opens space for honest, two-way understanding.
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