When a researcher aims to describe how other human beings make meaning from their lived experiences using the participants' own words, phenomenology is the appropriate research methodology. "It explores the lifeworld of the subjects and seeks to understand what matters to them and how they make sense of what they experience" (Zahavi, 2019, p. 117). Although conducting a phenomenological study has similarities to other qualitative research approaches, it has many unique aspects. It is a conceptual approach with specific assumptions about how people experience others and their environments and a research methodology. In this article, I aim to articulate the uniqueness of phenomenological approaches for health science research, and to familiarize the reader with the complexities inherent in conducting and evaluating this type of work.