homeopathy in holistic care

Welcome back Conscious Chimera followers! You may remember Dr. Teri Jackson from the last blog – the anniversary article! Since she is so wonderfully valuable in the world of integrative healthcare, I’ve invited her back. She graciously agreed and will teach us a bit about a type of Western Medicine known as homeopathy. Enjoy!

As our discussion began, Dr. Teri Jackson (TJ) provided some history: Homeopathy was developed by the German physician Dr. Samuel Hahnemann. His observation as a medical doctor was that many of the medications at the time were highly toxic. Things that we wouldn’t even think of as having a medical application today, such as toxic substances mercury and arsenic, were used as medicines. Dr. Hahnemann considered how these medical applications that are toxic could somehow be beneficial. He asked, Is there a way that we can still preserve the health benefits of these toxic substances while removing the toxicity? So his idea was to dilute them to the point to where they still have their medical application, but they didn’t have any more toxicity associated with them. So that’s where homeopathy started from. So Dr. Hahnemann would take something like mercury diluted down hundreds of times in order to have this medicine that was no longer the way it was supposed to. So that’s the very basic tenet of homeopathy. 

KM: It reminds me of how vaccinations work as well. There’s some diluting down of a substance. 

TJ: Yes, that’s actually an excellent point. Now while vaccinations and homeopathy are not exact – not the same thing – it can be helpful for our modern mind to think about it in a similar way. So, with a vaccination we take virus or some other agent that will normally cause illness in a person, we then dilute it down, inject it into that person so their immune system can then identify that particular agent and attack it, and therefore support the immune system of the person. Homeopathy works in a very similar way in that when we’re giving a diluted version of a medication, it isn’t the remedy itself that’s actually effecting change in the person. Instead, it’s hitting their energetic system. As a vaccine will affect the immune system of a person, homeopathy addresses the energetic system of a person.

KM: Western medical practice seems to have forgotten about its past inclusion of energetics.

TJ: Yes, and in fact, for centuries, we had homeopathic hospitals and universities. In 1910, things shifted when the Flexnor Report was published via the Carnegie Foundation, essentially stating that natural modalities were bunk, and that all medical interventions should be

pharmaceutically driven. Prior to that, it was rather acceptable that natural remedies, including homeopathy, were part of any doctor’s tool kit.

KM: Yes. I recall a little bit about what you’re saying. 

TJ: So what homeopathic remedies affect is what we call the vital force (of a person). In other traditions, such as Ayurvedic Indian traditions, we call it prana. In Chinese medicine, we call it Chi or Qi. In Western traditions, we call it the vital force. So just as acupuncture in Chinese medicine affects the chi/qi system, homeopathy, similarly affects the vital force. Basically, homeopathy works with the same energetic system as acupuncture. 

KM: Okay, so vital force is the term that is used in the Western system, compared with prone or chi/qi in other systems. Thanks for bringing that up.

TJ: So the answer to your question about vaccinations that’s exactly how it works. It’s basically taking the diluted substance and triggering the innate vital force response of the person to self-heal and self-regulate.

KM: I see, that’s really great. Can you tell us about particular homeopathic remedies and their uses or applications?

TJ: Sure! There’s a concept in homeopathy called miasmatic theory. Certain attributes are passed down the generations and from a biological, physiologic genetic standpoint we understand this. We get our genes passed down from our parents, grandparents, great grandparents, and these certain attributes, physical, mental, emotional, are passed down and that’s something that we know and understand to be true. There’s another layer to that story that I think we talked about in our last blog interview, which was epigenetics. And that’s how our genetic code the DNA is concrete, but the expression of those genes can change depending on our environment (food, diet, stress levels, trauma are examples), all of those different types of expressions of genes are also passed down through the generations.

So this dovetails nicely with this homeopathic idea of miasm, which is that there are these core traits that we have as individuals that are passed down through the generations. And one of these miasms is the cancer miasm. So, Causticum, for example, is a cancer remedy in homeopathy. So is Carcinosin. These are remedies that although the constellation of symptoms are not exactly the same, the miasm is that of cancer. So, we understand that cancer can run in families and it goes beyond just genetic mutations. There is a constellation of characteristics and attributes that are passed down and then they manifest in several ways, so there are several cancer remedies.

KM: Since you named Causticum first, and I am also familiar with that remedy, please say a little more about how it can be helpful.

TJ: Causticum is one of the remedies for anxiety. Also, lesions and sores on the skin that have a burning quality. Also, we look at the personalities of the people and match the remedy to that personality as well. 

KM: That’s right, because you’re treating the whole person – mind, body, spirit, emotional, all of that. 

TJ: So sometimes I’ll ask a patient,  “What makes you mad? What are the kinds of things that really anger you?” Someone with a Causticum constitution would reply with injustice, social injustice. Now people get can get angry about all sorts of different things. So if a person comes to me, and their primary complaint is anger, I’m not just going to give them a remedy for anger. I need to know what makes them angry. Why are you angry? With what are you most angry about? Out of social injustice? Are you angry because you’re holding on to a child resentment? It’s different for everybody. And so that’s where we have to understand not only the physical symptoms that a remedy can address, but also the personality traits.

KM: Yeah, good. Good points to remind us that we want to think in a more holistic way and an open minded way with these types of treatments, treating again the whole person. So you said there were hundreds and hundreds of homeopathic remedies.

 TJ: Yes, there are literally hundreds of homeopathic remedies. The most commonly prescribed remedies are called polycrests. These are the ones you can find in the little blue tubs at health food or natural stores. Arnica is the one most people are familiar with which is known to help superficial things such as bruising and strained muscles. Polycrests are the very commonly used remedies that address a very broad range of symptoms.

KM: What else should we know about in this world of homeopathy. Anything specific to be aware of?

TJ: So the tricky thing with homeopathy is that as a layperson without training, if you’re going pick out a remedy for yourself, it really is a shot in the dark. One of the great challenges is choosing the correct remedy! Untrained people might think that homeopathy doesn’t work because they’ve chosen a remedy for themselves that is not the correct one.

That being said, there are some really commonly used remedies for certain mental emotional conditions. An example is grief. The big grief remedies are Ignatia and Natrum-mur. These are remedies that you can consider if you’re feeling grief stricken. Phosphorus and Arsenicum are two that are really good remedies for anxiety. But again, the underlying “pathology” is what is necessary to understand in order to choose the correct mental emotional remedy. It’s very individualized.

KM: That’s why it is so important to work with a trained professional.

TJ: Yes. While there are lay homeopaths, generally speaking, people who practice homeopathy either are a naturopathic physician like I am, or a medical doctor – many are practicing homeopathy. There are also certification courses that will certify lay homeopaths. Lay homeopaths are people who do not have a medical degree, but do have advanced training. And depending on the state, these people may or may not be licensed to practice medicine. In which case there would just be more of a consultant. 

KM: Yeah, it does differ state by state. It’s really nice to learn more about this. Thank you for this introduction to homeopathy! A take-home-point for me is that we are much more than just a blob of matter. We are mind, emotion, and spirit as well.

TJ: And energetics!

KM: Right! I’d say that there are many kinds of medicine helpers, in different ways, and in different systems. Of course, consult with your health care provider. But the different systems can work well together.

TJ: Absolutely. These modalities are not mutually exclusive. Just like you use, you know, a lot of pain management clinics will utilize chiropractic or acupuncture. That doesn’t mean that you can’t do both. You can do traditional pain management along with these other modalities. 

KM: Any last words before we wrap up?

TJ: Again, they are not mutually exclusive. 

KM: That’s such an important reminder, that it does not have to be one or the other. We can choose integrative medicine. 

Thank you for taking the time today to allow me to interview you!

metabolic approach to health and wellness – 8th anniversary article

To those of you who read this blog, I have a special treat for you today, which marks the 8th anniversary of Conscious Chimera. I (KM) was thrilled and honored when Dr. Teri Jackson (TJ) agreed to be interviewed for this anniversary article. Dr. Teri, as many people call her, is a naturopathic physician in practice for the last 13 years or so. She currently resides on the island of Maui. Those who know her, recognize her skill and vast knowledge with regard to the metabolic approach to health and disease development. Here, we will look at this through the lens of Dr. Nasha Winters’ metabolic approach to treatment and, most importantly, prevention. 

KM: So, Dr. Teri, what is the metabolic approach and what are some common metabolic diseases that people are living with?

TJ: The basic tenant of the metabolic approach to health and wellness is that all disease at its core is due to a disruption in the metabolic function. The treatment approaches used tend to support the overall health of the person, rather than just going after the disease itself. We approach the whole person, not just the disease state.

Generally, when people think of metabolic diseases, the ones that really come to mind are diabetes, because that has a direct influence from our blood sugar control, which is metabolism, as well as heart disease, high blood pressure, high lipids, and high cholesterol. We typically think of those as metabolic diseases, but even conditions such as cancer, which our culture has been conditioned to think of as a genetic disease, is linked to metabolism. We now know that it’s actually more of a dysregulated metabolism that actually is causing cancer, not genetic mutations, per se. So it’s the dysregulated metabolism that causes the genetic dysfunctions, which then leads to cancer.

KM: Not the other way around!

TJ: Yes, exactly. So the conventional theory of how cancer develops is that there’s a genetic mutation and again, this is called the somatic mutation theory of cancer, and this is what conventional medicine focuses on –  you know, attack the tumor, kill it, get rid of the tumor, because that’s the problem from the conventional perspective. But the way that we’re approaching cancer is that it’s actually the other way around. 

It’s dysfunctional, dysregulated metabolism of the individual that’s actually creating these genetic mutations that then explode into the cancering process.

KM: So this approach seems to go more to the root cause, and look into what would cause genes to express in such a way…a harmful way.

TJ: Yes, that’s exactly right. And in fact, we don’t ignore genetics when we talk about the metabolic approach to disease. We are absolutely looking at genetics, and in particular a concept called epigenetics. So there’s the DNA, the genome that we’re born with, and that is unalterable, that is just who we are, but these genes can be turned on and off in different types of ways based on diet and lifestyle and stress levels. The mental emotional piece is actually much bigger here than a lot of people recognize – it isn’t just physical toxins in the environment that create epigenetic changes, but toxicity in interpersonal relationships, workplace dynamics, dysfunctional coping mechanisms, etc., also have a tremendous impact on genetic expression. So these genes can be turned on and off in either healthy ways to help promote the wellbeing of the person or they can be turned on and off in ways that are detrimental to the person’s health. How we live and breathe and move and sleep and light exposure – all of these really basic things – It’s not just administering supplements, it’s about getting those really foundational pieces into place, which is fresh air, sunshine, exercise, reduced blue light exposure from electronics, EMFs, etc.

KM: Talking about the epigenetic component reminds me of when I was in the first three years of my doctoral program, when we were really focused on prenatal and perinatal psychology. We talked about how in this earliest time  – life in the womb, but also going back into the mother’s life, the grandmother’s life.

TJ: So it’s like you’re talking about this kind of mental-emotional piece, or psychological health, but it goes even beyond that. It goes deeper into the physiology as well. Because the eggs that females have were developed in her grandmother. All of us were in our grandmother’s womb.

This relates to the concept of epigenetics. So we can look at this as generational, you know, we can call it generational trauma or learning, and that’s more of a psychological approach to it however it’s based in physiology and genetics, and this idea of epigenetics. For example, part of the questionnaire that I have with some of my patients includes questions like “Did your parents, grandparents, or great grandparents, go through The Depression? Were they Holocaust survivors?” – these types of questions, because that kind of trauma turns into this generational trauma.

KM: Oh, and war! Through wars, for example, we are creating future generations who will have these genetic predispositions.

TJ: Exactly…That really isn’t part of your genetic blueprint as far as your DNA goes. It’s this epigenetic expression. So yeah, so it goes on, on all these different levels that generational trauma is passed on, and transmitted. 

So we think about health, or lack of health, or disease as growing from soil, if you will. If we can consider ourselves as a garden, we are needing to nourish that soil in a way that can support us to grow and develop as a healthy organism. In this way, we can think of ourselves as a terrain.

An analogy that a lot of people use is that of the fishbowl. So it’s like if you have a goldfish in a bowl of water that’s just polluted and dirty, and filled with all manner of crap and toxins and no nutrients, you don’t just treat that fish with medications or even supplements. You would think that the way to help that fish is to just move it into a clean bowl. So the metabolic approach doesn’t just give the fish medication or supplements to help it retain its health. After all, this fish is in this dirty toxic soup. So we have to clean up the environment, both internally and externally. We have to address both of those.

So in order to remain well or heal from disease, we target the terrain. According to the metabolic approach, there are 10 different aspects of the terrain that we really want to address with each patient. We usually pick the top three to work with at first because otherwise it gets overwhelming for both the patient and the practitioner. 

So we have to start with the top priorities. We’ve already mentioned genetics and epigenetics, so that’s one.There’s the digestive health and microbiome as well. That’s basically the bacteria and everything else. There’s also blood sugar balance. And off course there’s toxic burden which goes back to the fish bowl discussion. Here, we need to basically ensure that we’re in a clean, relatively toxin free environment. Immune Function is also huge because our immune function is basically that gateway that’s protecting us from our environment. Inflammation is another one. It’s been long known that inflammation is a root cause of many, many disease processes, and lots of people say that, but then we also have to get down beneath the inflammation. Inflammation is the cause of so many disease processes, if not all of them.

Photo by Solare Flares on Pexels.com

KM: We have to ask, but what causes inflammation? 

TJ: That’s correct. So we have to go we have to dig deeper on that one by determining why the inflammatory processes are out of balance. It could be from an infection, environmental toxins, improper diet, allergies, etc.

And another one is blood circulation. We need to make sure that our blood is moving properly throughout the system in an unimpeded way which includes healthy cardiovascular and lung function. Hormone balance is another big one for the terrain. Hormone balance is critical, not just with women, with men as well and we’re not just talking about sex hormones. We’re talking about thyroid. We’re talking about cortisol and stress hormones. We’re talking about hormones in the brain that regulate hunger signals and satiety. So these hormones are really, really important to keep in balance. And this also actually ties into toxic burden because our world is so heavy and xenoestrogens, pesticides, and plastics which are totally messing up our hormonal systems. Not just with men and women, but with children even! Children are having these crazy hormonal symptoms that they shouldn’t be. Another drop in the bucket is stress. Again, the stress response and bio rhythms (such as circadian rhythms) are very important. I ask my patients, are you in bed by 10:00pm, or the very latest 11:00pm? Are you sleeping through the night? Are you getting up at an appropriate hour? Do you feel rested and refreshed? 

KM: Sleep is a big one! One doctor said that if you have to do one thing, or make one positive change in your life, make it about sleep.

TJ: I agree. It’s true.

KM: Did we cover the Terrain 10 or is there something else?

TJ: Yes, there’s one more thing. That’s the mental-emotional piece. This is a piece that regular primary care doctors, even integrative health practitioners, tend to kind of shy away from this because we think it’s not in our wheelhouse. Sometimes it’s more appropriate to refer out to other practitioners if necessary (counselors or psychologists, other therapists), but we have to really understand that such a big piece of health and healing is this mental-emotional piece. It’s huge. Hundreds and hundreds of practitioners have just seen this time and time again. That is, that one’s attitude toward their health matters. Feeling positive and hopeful and having faith that their health can be restored does so much good for them. However, we also have to be careful not to push people into this toxic positivity, where they feel like they have to force this like, you know, Little Miss Sunshine, if that’s not what they’re feeling, because when you’re suppressing these very real, very normal, very validated feelings of fear and hopelessness and despair (genuine feelings), especially once you come up against a diagnosis, like cancer. 

KM: Right, because then this so called “toxic positivity” can make it ineffective. It’s ineffective when it is not congruent. If you are in a true state of fear, but then telling yourself you have to say positive affirmations all day is, in my opinion, it’s a waste of time.

TJ: Right! It’s a waste of time, and it can even create more problems for the person because then we’re suppressing and stuffing stuff. A huge tenet of naturopathy is that we don’t suppress. We don’t suppress symptoms and we don’t suppress emotions. We have to get the stuff out, and process it as it comes out. You know, a lot of times, when people are facing a pretty serious diagnosis, they’re trying to stay positive and upbeat to protect the people around them. And that’s also really counterproductive. 

KM: Yes, I totally agree. This is leading me to recall how I’ve heard Dr. Gabor Mate talking about the emotional lives of people with some serious diseases, most of whom are women. Knowing that the vast majority of those diagnosed are women when it comes to immune diseases (many of which have a metabolic origin) really hit me hard, especially alongside getting a peek into their inner, emotional lives.

TJ: I remember hearing this. You know, I haven’t always been in the integrative oncology world. I’ve actually got my initial training working with the allopathic conventional medical school in Portland: Oregon Health Sciences University. I did Breast Cancer Research for a number of years in Portland. And that’s kind of what we used to say. It was primarily breast cancer patients that we were working with. We would say that there are actually three personality types. There’s the Type A personality which we know of, you know, kind of typical type A, there’s a type B, which is like your chill, laid back, and then there’s your type C, your cancer personality type, which is what we’re describing as people pleasing. It’s this, putting other people first and ignoring your own needs in order to support others. And it’s also this piece of suppression as well. Coming back to this sort of idea that if we suppress our own needs, our own emotions, our own ugliness, things that we don’t want the world to see…

KM: Like the shadow? 

TJ: Yes, thank you. That’s another really big piece to this C type personality, this cancer type. It’s this suppression and putting on a really good face and trying to present well to the world.

KM: So part of the remedy, in a way, a little slice of the remedy pie, is authenticity. Healthy expression of true emotion. And how do we see the shadow? Well I know we can see it in dreams. That’s just one reason why keeping a dream journal is important. We can also see it when we’re tracking our thoughts from a kind of cognitive therapy perspective. You can learn to track your thoughts and pay attention to all the rambling and just see what you’re stuffing and see what’s coming up or out. 

So we’ve covered the Terrain 10, especially placing attention on the mental-emotional component.

TJ: Homeopathy, which is a gentle treatment, sits well with the metabolic perspective in that we are not just treating the disease state, we are treating the person.

KM: Right. My understanding of how homeopathy works is really important because if you’re looking at it from a strictly Western mindset, one that’s of a Newtonian, reductionist, materialistic perspective, homeopathy doesn’t make any sense. So looking at the energetics behind things, understanding that we are electric beings, energetic fields, if you will. So homeopathy can marry well, I think, with that holistic, whole person approach. 

TJ: One thing that really pops into my mind right now is a questionnaire that we give all of our new patients – this is the Adverse Childhood Experiences.

KM: Oh yes! I administer that to all of my therapy clients as well. It’s so very important. 

TJ: One thing that I’ve learned through my own therapeutic process is that the situations we were put in during childhood really do follow us into adult life.

KM: Exactly, and now we have the proof!

What’s beautiful about the ACE study is that it is validating. It helps people understand that the childhood trauma they experienced can have a powerful direct (negative) impact on their adult selves. The trauma endured, or rather survived, by a child is never their fault, however it is their responsibility to heal from it. The work put into the healing from the grief, terror, deep pain, leaves a positive impact on the world and others, including their own offspring. To recover fully, we must go through an often lonely process of naming it or recognizing it, claiming it by taking ownership, and then releasing it or dumping it.

TJ: So just for example, as far as the mental-emotional adverse childhood event, or even adverse anytime in your life event, for example, when we see gynecological cancer, we have to think about sexual trauma. When we think about, you know, lung cancer, we think about grief. So this is where we kind of tie in some of these concepts from Chinese medicine, emotional, mental states that we tend to associate with a different organ systems. So when we look at things like the lung, that’s really grief. When we look at people with liver cancers, or any kind of liver problem, we have to look at, you know, how do you process your anger and your frustration? Are you able to process that in a healthy way? Or do you lash out, do you rage? Do  you stuff it down and then self harm by expressing that anger toward yourself? 

Prostate cancer, like gynecological cancer, can have a relationship with one’s difficulty with expressing healthy sexual expression, in a nontoxic way. How do you manage or express your masculinity? Are you able to connect with another in a healthy way? These are challenges for men in this culture.

Now with cancers related to the bladder and kidneys, anything that has to do with the urinary tract actually, we think of fear – like an existential fear – not necessarily a fear about anything in general. Essentially, it’s like “what does it all mean?” You know, being fearful in the world. 

But with regard to treatment we must look at the toxic burden for these cancers. So, What are you eating? What’s your water like? Are you drinking too much alcohol? That kind of stuff.

KM: Right! A slice of the toxic burden pie, when it comes to bladder, kidney, or urinary tract cancers might come from exposure to the news, especially these days. News stations need their audiences to be fearful of the world because that gets them to tune in more often…higher ratings. One of the best things I’ve ever done, is make the decision to not own a television and not watch the news, except for perhaps on a bi-weekly or even monthly basis. I see it as a protective factor.

As we wrap up our time together today, Dr. Teri, is there any last thought you’d like to share?

TJ: The one thing that I just see time and time again in patients with all kinds of health conditions is how are you speaking your truth? How are you expressing yourself in a genuine and authentic way? Especially in this culture that we find ourselves in with so much focus on external appearances and where we feel like we have to present ourselves to the world in a very specific way. Discover what you love and do it! It can be your love for art, dance, music..any kind of healthy expression of who you truly are. So figure out who you really are and what you really want out of this life. That will be more potent, more powerful than any drug, any supplement, any dietary intervention that we can come up with.

KM: I love this. Dr. Teri, thank you so much for sharing your wisdom today and for taking the time to be here. I appreciate you.

To Your Health,

Dr. Kim

#metabolichealth

#mindbodymedicine

#metabolicapproach

#naturopathy

#trauma

#cancer

dreams save lives

A recent series of events, including dreams of colleages, friends, as well as dreams of my own, inspired the writing of this article (after interviewing Dr. Burk) at this particular time. My hope is that we continue to trust our fullest human potentials, including how dreams can help us see diseases developing, heal them, and even better, warn us to change course prior to an illness developing!

It was spring 2018 when I was introduced to Kathleen O’Keefe-Kanavos (dream teacher and three-time breast cancer survivor). Our introduction was online, as I was invited to be a guest on her webTV program (see kathleenokeefekanavos.com) featuring upcoming conference presenters of the International Association for the Study of Dreams (IASD). Just a couple of months later, I met Larry Burk, MD, CEHP, a holistic radiologist, at the IASD conference (asdreams.com), which took place in Arizona. Both were in attendance and promoting their recently published book Dreams That Can Save Your Life: Early Warning Signs of Cancer and Other Diseases. It was hot-off-the-press and I knew I just had to read it. Needless to say, I read the book and must tell you that I hadn’t read anything quite like it. This book is filled with startling true stories of men and women whose dreams predicted disease and, for some, even guided them through the healing process. The authors want to bring dreaming back into Western medicine, giving dreams the attention they deserve. I wanted to learn more about the studies currently taking place, so I interviewed Dr. Burk in April 2019. Here is what he shared with me.

Early on, Dr. Burk had a few close friends who had dreams warning them of breast cancer – I’m thinking, this research is personal. Furthermore, Burk himself is a dreamer and has a strong relationship with his dream-life, using them for guidance. He has been tracking his dreams for over 30 years. Knowing that dreams have guided Burk through his life, I asked him about his decision to leave his education direction position at Duke in 2004 only to return to Duke in 2015. His decision to leave Duke (Integrative Medicine Center) was propelled by a series of synchronicities, while his decision to return to Duke (University Medical Center) was supported by a dream. When unsure whether to return and accept the offer to return to Duke, he decided to use a dream incubation technique – writing a question in his dream journal regarding the decision needed to be made. You can read Burk’s entire dream in Dreams That Can Save Your Life. We discuss our trust in dream incubation as well as synchronicity. At that point, I share with him ways I use the Tarot to guide me and to help me understand my dreams at a deeper level. Burk and I have both attended, and very much appreciated, the Tarot and Dreams workshops at IASD conferences. We also both own a copy of Sidewalk Oracles: Playing with Signs, Symbols, and Synchronicity in Everyday Life by Robert Moss. Our appreciation for dream journaling, synchronicity, art, and Tarot, bring our discussion to life. We acknowledge that there are so many ways to work with dreams!

Like my own journey, Burk has trusted dreams to guide in career decisions. In addition, Burk was guided by dreams during the editing process of his first book, Let Magic Happen: Adventures in Healing with a Holistic Radiologist (2012). He recalls a series of initially puzzling dreams that led him to make particular wise decisions.

I wondered if he has lost colleague-friends over his deep interest and belief in predictive dreams. In 1987, when his interest in alternative ways started to develop things were alright. Burk believed he was protected from harsh feedback during those years. No serious push-back came up until 1996, when his work in mind-body medicine peaked. In 1999, however, some wanted him fired! These days, Western medicine has not progressed much with regard to dreams and health.

We both highly recommend keeping a dream diary, and sharing warning dreams with others, especially your medical doctor. Overall, Western medicine is not very friendly towards the use of dreams as diagnostic tools, yet the countless reports of how they have saved lives warrants taking a more open-minded approach. Case in point, Burk’s TEDx talk in Raleigh, NC (2016), was eventually censored/banned, claiming that it was unscientific. His TEDx coaches encouraged him to be very conservative and to approach everyone in the audience as a skeptic. They encouraged him to wear a suit even, instead of the informal shirt he had chosen. Burk shares with me how he complied with the demands, and believes he approached his presentation conservatively. You can find his TedX talk on YouTube today. I hope you watch it and see for yourself. We both watched Dr. Christopher Kerr’s Tedx talk (Buffalo), I See Dead People. This talk focused on dreams of the dying in palliative care. So some areas of medicine are more open-minded.

In 2012, Burk’s interest in this area developed. With a few stories in hand, he began research on dreams and medical implications in 2013, which was published two years later. Burk credits Bob Van de Castle and Stanley Krippner as initial inspirations and cheerleaders of his work! Van de Castle suggested he present his research at an IASD conference, yet had passed away before he was able to publish his paper. More recently, he conducted a three-month pilot study on dreams of women who are having breast biopsies. This was submitted to an academic journal awaiting decision. How many women are actually having dreams related to their breasts before biopsies? How many women are even writing them down, or keeping a dream journal? We know some women who are having warning dreams! But, without logging dreams how could anyone know?

In addition to research, Burk is also very passionate about doing his healing work with tapping (He has his version of EFT, called EDANVIR) and dreams. One of his early online clients was suffering greatly. She had recurring dreams of childhood trauma and abuse provoking deep feelings of anger, and lived with fears of not being able to make it on her own. Fear and anger were in the forefront. Burk taught her to tap on these emotions. Following the session, the client reported powerful healing dreams where she becomes rescuer with superpowers. Her harsh medical symptoms vanish and her lifestyle improves greatly. With this case, Burk said, the dreams tell you what to tap on, then later, tell you if the treatment is working. This is one of many examples of dreams coming in service as tools for diagnosis and recovery processes.

I hope the information and stories here have prompted you to begin or continue using a dream journal and to trust in your dreams. Dr. Burk can be contacted via his website: larryburk.com. Take a look – you are sure to be intrigued and educated within its pages.

May Your Dreams Be Your Medicine,

Kim