SLEEP & DREAMS IN EAST ASIAN MEDICINE 

Saturday and Sunday, March 23-24, 2024
9am - 4pm Eastern

Contact

Daoist Traditions College
382 Montford Ave, Asheville NC, 28801 
828-225-3993
ceu@daoisttraditions.edu
 

Sleep & Dreams in

East Asian Medicine

Evan Rabinowitz

Livestream and In-Person
(Recording available for 1-week*)

12 PDA's 

$300
(NCCAOM & California applied*)

The average person will spend 26 years of their life asleep and 6 of those years dreaming. Sleep and dreams are fundamental to the experience of being human. And yet, they remain a mysterious and underappreciated part of life. Healthy sleep is elusive to many. Approximately one out of four Americans reports some form of sleep disturbance. As practitioners, problematic sleep is one of the most common complaints we hear from our patients and helping them sleep well is an essential prerequisite to all other healing. This course covers how East Asian medicine can be used to resolve a multitude of sleep problems, from insomnia, to sleepwalking, night terrors, nightmares, narcolepsy, bed-wetting, and many others. 

          
Dreams are one of the most fascinating aspects of human consciousness. Across cultures and times dreams have served as sources of spiritual guidance and inner communication for individuals and collectivities. The journeys and adventures within dreams offer wisdom for waking life and our inner nature struggles. East Asian medicine gives us profound insight into the nature and meaning of dreams. Dreams are portals between yin and yang, the known and the hidden, and perhaps, keys to the mystery of death itself. Daoism, Buddhism, Confucianism and the classical medical texts of Chinese medicine have much to say about the significance of dreams and their interpretation. This course will teach you how dream interpretation can be skillfully integrated into clinical practice.  

* NCCAOM provider #1278. 

*This course has applied for 12 ceus in Category 1 with the California Acupuncture Board under provider number 0666.  

* 1 week access to course recording begins immediately after course concludes. The recording will expire on March 31, 2024 at midnight eastern.  We are not able to respond to requests for extended access. 

Payment methods: Paypal or check. Checks can be accepted until March 18, 2024.  Checks will not be accepted after this date. Check should be mailed to Daoist Traditions College 382 Montford Ave, Asheville, NC 28801. Your seat is not reserved until payment is received in full and must be received prior to class attendance. 

We offer a 50% refund for cancellations completed 30 days or more before class. Cancellations made from 29 to 15 days in advance will be offered a 25% refund. We are unable to offer refunds for cancellations made less than 15 days in advance.

Dr. Evan Rabinowitz is the Founder of the Yao Shan Center for Chinese Medicine in Washington, DC, where he maintains his clinical practice. He is a professor at Daoist Traditions College of Chinese Medical Arts in Asheville, NC. He is the former Director of Chinese Herbal Medicine at the Maryland University of Integrative Health where during his seven-year tenure he helped create the university's master and doctorate programs in oriental medicine.