Mirror Touch: Notes from a Doctor Who Can Feel Your Pain cover

Mirror Touch: Notes from a Doctor Who Can Feel Your Pain

by Joel Salinas

Narrated by Adam Verner

3.67 ABR Score
(333 ratings)
★ 3.61 Goodreads (315) ★ 3.83 Audible (18)

Why You'll Love This

A neurologist who feels his patients' pain explores what that reveals about empathy, medicine, and the neuroscience of truly understanding suffering.

Listen to Mirror Touch: Notes from a Doctor Who Can Feel Your Pain on Audible →

About This Book

Dr. Joel Salinas lives medicine from the inside out. A Harvard-trained neurologist, he has mirror-touch synesthesia, a rare condition that causes him to physically feel the sensations and emotions of those around him. In hospital wards filled with stroke patients and spinal cord injuries, that means absorbing his patients' pain as his own. Part memoir, part neuroscience primer, the book traces how Salinas navigates a career built on empathy that is, for him, entirely involuntary, and what that extraordinary neurological wiring reveals about consciousness, identity, and what it means to truly understand another person.

Adam Verner brings a measured, thoughtful quality to the narration that suits the material well. His pacing gives the more technical passages room to land without feeling like a lecture, and his voice carries the introspective moments with quiet authority rather than sentimentality. At just over ten hours, the runtime feels well-balanced for a book that moves between clinical case studies and personal reflection. The audio format amplifies the intimacy of Salinas's perspective in a way the page alone cannot fully replicate.