
What happens when a family doctor who's practiced medicine for 30 years starts asking patients about their dreams?My friend Dr. Darren Jakubec joins me for a conversation about the intersection of dreams, trauma, and healing. Darren practices family medicine and anesthetics in northern Canada, and over the years he's found ways to weave dream work into his medical practice - sometimes in the emergency room, sometimes in his pain clinic.We explore how dreams can reveal what traditional medicine sometimes misses, why so many physical symptoms have roots in unprocessed trauma, and what it's like to practice medicine when you understand that healing involves more than just treating symptoms.In this conversation we discuss:- How Darren uses dreams with patients in medical settings- The connection between dissociation, trauma, and physical health- Why most people struggle to acknowledge emotional hardship- What happens when you approach dreams as guidance rather than puzzles to solve- The challenge of staying grounded in Western medicine while recognizing its limitationsThis isn't about rejecting medical care - it's about understanding that true healing often requires addressing the whole person, not just their physical symptoms.Want to work with your own dreams?We are developing online classes and coaching programs launching Fall 2025. If you're interested in learning to trust your own relationship with dreams (rather than relying on dream dictionaries), subscribe and stay tuned.More interviews with Dr. Darren Jakubec: Anesthesia, Chronic Pain, and Dreamwork: "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ixMGWj8ySI8"From Emergency Room to Psychedelics: "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I74RBcECi1YIntroducing Ketamine Infusion Therapy for Refractory Depression: "https://overcast.fm/+AA1BFDM6zKA"Connect with me: "peopleofthedream.com"If this conversation resonates with you, please like, subscribe, and share with anyone who might benefit from a different approach to understanding themselves and their healing journey.