Less like arriving at a clinic, more like being welcomed to someone’s home — because that’s what it is.
Dreamlab is a small, private place on rural land about 15 minutes south of Madison. We don’t publish the address — the exact location and directions arrive with your booking confirmation. It’s an easy drive; you’ll know you’re close when the road quiets down and the fields open up.
It’s a quiet stretch of land — a creek and woods along one edge, open pasture, a barn, and a small herd of four or five horses who are very much part of the place. You’ll see them as you arrive; most people do a double-take. The studio you passed is where Jonathan makes things — pottery, woodwork, electronics. None of it is staged. It’s a home and a working property, and dreamlab lives inside it.
The treatment room is a loft above the living room, up a set of stairs inside the house. It’s a calm, private space — and the chair is positioned to look straight out over the horses, which is the kind of detail we care about. We currently run two soft chambers at 1.5 ATA — one you sit up in, one you lie down in — paired with name-brand Drive oxygen concentrators. We’ll get you settled in whichever suits you. What a session itself feels like is on what to expect.
There’s a bathroom you’re welcome to use before or after. We always meet you in person, so there’s no checking in and no waiting room. Afterward, we’ll offer you a beverage — with an optional vitamin cocktail — and a minute to land before you head out. If you’re a member and waivered for it, you’re invited to walk right out into the field on your way home — not a horse tied to a post, but the herd in their own pasture, where you can stand among them, pet them, and just be. (Watch your step for the horsepies.) The creek is there too, if you want it: a natural cold plunge that runs cool year-round — bracing, but never ice.
Often paired with near-infrared light therapy — same visit, converging biology.