
We both thought helping meant saving people. Bill became a therapist and activist. Darren became an emergency room doctor, trained in every resuscitation course available. We were drawn to professions where we could "save" others—all while our dreams were showing us something completely different: we couldn't save anyone, and that realization would change everything about how we show up in our relationships, our work, and our lives.In this conversation, we explore:How "saving" others often means we're avoiding ourselvesWhy your dreams reveal the boundaries you're not setting in waking lifeThe difference between being present for someone and trying to fix themHow learning to feel (not just think) changes everythingWhat it means to have an "inner world" and why it mattersThis isn't about dream interpretation or symbol dictionaries. It's about learning to trust your own relationship with your dreams—and discovering what they're trying to teach you about how you move through the world.You are the expert on your own dreams.ABOUT THIS CHANNELPeople of the Dream explores Reassociative Dreamwork—a practice that helps you reconnect with the parts of yourself that culture has taught you to ignore. No dream dictionaries. No external authorities. Just you, your dreams, and the wisdom they offer.CONNECT WITH USBill St. Cyr - Dreamwork practitioner and psychotherapistDr. Darren Jakubec - Emergency physician and dreamwork practitionerQuestions? Comments? Share your thoughts below—we read and respond to everything.MENTIONED IN THIS AUDIOInner world vs. outer worldThe "savior complex" in helping professionsBody awareness and somatic dreamworkFinding safety in dream explorationAnimal dreams and what they teach us#dreams #dreamwork #boundaries #innerwork #emotionalhealing #personalgrowth