This paper shares the clinical experiences and personal reflections of a dentist practicing special needs dentistry under conditions of limited resources. Drawing on care provided across diverse settings, including outpatient clinics, rural outreach services, and home-based care, the paper describes the challenges faced by patients with autism, cerebral palsy, and multiple disabilities, as well as by their families. These challenges include inadequate access to medical resources, the physical and emotional burden of traveling long distances for care, repeated experiences of rejection, substantial caregiving and financial pressures, and ethical tensions surrounding the use of physical restraint and anesthesia when clinically necessary. In daily practice, dentists caring for patients with special needs must continually adjust the pace of treatment, cultivate long-term therapeutic relationships, and develop a deep understanding of each patient’s behavioral patterns and care needs. They are required to balance time constraints, patients’ emotional responses, and safety considerations within complex clinical environments. However, limited reimbursement and insufficient systemic support within the current health insurance framework have rendered special needs dentistry a high-risk and time-intensive field with disproportionately low compensation. This has discouraged younger dentists from entering the field, leading to workforce attrition and widening gaps in care. Despite these challenges, moments in which patients achieve meaningful improvements in oral function reaffirm the dentist’s sense of professional purpose. By sharing these clinical experiences, this paper seeks to foster greater understanding of special needs dental care and to encourage collective efforts to safeguard this essential component of healthcare equity.