Creative acts in clinical work are discussed as forms of resistance to everyday life that can harden the relationship in a clinical setting. Cartography methodologically backs up this account of experiences had in clinical encounters, observing clinical work in one of its most problematic aspects, namely, therapeutic accompaniment. Conditions for clinical inventions are based on their double objective: 1) to shake up the subject and his or her world in their singularity, and, 2) to bring about dislocations in the clinical work when one is faced with the unexpected.
Clinic; therapeutic accompaniment; creative act; everyday life