When longtime psychologist Dr. Joseph L. J. Schwartz lost his wife in 2014, the grief was overwhelming. A man who had spent decades helping others manage their emotions suddenly found himself unable to manage his own. “I was in total shock and panic,” he later wrote in his memoir “SuperRadiant: A Doctor’s Personal Journey. “My immediate thoughts were self-blame and immense guilt.”
That dark period nearly broke him, but it also became the foundation for a new philosophy of healing he now calls his “Non-Prescription Prescription.” The idea is striking in its simplicity: combine exercise, Transcendental Meditation, and psychotherapy to support the mind’s natural ability to heal itself.
“Exercise strengthens the body and regulates mood; meditation calms the mind; therapy helps people understand and change unhelpful patterns,” Schwartz said in an interview. “Together, they address mental health from multiple angles.”
The Science Behind Simplicity
Schwartz’s approach may seem intuitive, but the evidence supporting it is robust. A 2019 JAMA Psychiatry review found that regular physical activity significantly reduced symptoms of depression across age groups and backgrounds. Even modest daily movement, like walking or stretching, was linked to improved mood and better emotional regulation.
The second element, Transcendental Meditation (TM), is a technique Schwartz first learned decades ago and has practiced ever since. TM involves silently repeating a mantra to quiet the mind and access what practitioners describe as a “state of restful alertness.”
Research suggests this practice can lower blood pressure, reduce stress hormone levels, and improve brain function. Schwartz points to more than 400 peer-reviewed studies published in over 160 journals demonstrating benefits for stress, anxiety, and cardiovascular health. In one Lancet Psychiatry trial, 61 percent of veterans with PTSD who practiced TM reported meaningful improvement in symptoms, outperforming those receiving standard trauma therapy.
The third pillar, psychotherapy, remains a mainstay of mental health treatment. According to the American Psychological Association, talk therapy continues to be the most effective intervention for anxiety and depression, particularly when combined with lifestyle changes. Schwartz views therapy as the glue that holds his three-part model together: “Movement stabilizes mood, meditation clears the mind, and therapy helps make sense of it all,” he explains.
From Grief to Growth
After his wife’s death, Schwartz says he reached emotional rock bottom. “I persisted in getting interviews, but I was not being helped or paid,” he recalled. “The stress between us now was beginning to get overwhelming.”
In 2015, he recommitted to his twice-daily TM practice, 20 minutes each morning and evening and began attending retreats in Washington, D.C., and Massachusetts. Over time, his mental state began to shift. “Looking back five years later,” he wrote, “I am absolutely amazed at the rapid positive changes in my life.”
He rebuilt his private practice, repaired strained family relationships, and after decades of burnout, found a renewed sense of purpose. Neuroscience may explain why: meditation has been shown to enhance brain-wave coherence, synchronizing electrical activity across different brain regions, leading to clearer thinking and greater emotional stability.
Challenging the Medication-First Model
While Schwartz acknowledges the importance of medication for serious mental illnesses, he believes society often turns to it too quickly. “Our healthcare model is medication-first,” he said. “We could do more to empower people to take an active role in their recovery.”
His view reflects a broader shift toward integrative mental health, which blends traditional medical care with behavioral and lifestyle-based interventions. “The TM technique is not a religion or philosophy,” Schwartz wrote. “No belief or expectation is needed for it to be effective.”
Small Steps, Big Change
For Schwartz, the most powerful transformations often begin with small, consistent habits. He recalls patients who turned their lives around by walking daily, meditating regularly, and opening up in therapy. “They’re simple habits,” he said, “but they create momentum. People feel more in control of their healing.”
At 66, Schwartz says he’s found peace after years of chaos. “Instead of being envious of what I didn’t have,” he reflected, “I started to appreciate, enjoy, and be grateful for everything I have right now.”
How to Begin
- Move daily: Walk, stretch, or dance—consistency matters more than intensity.
- Meditate: Learn Transcendental Meditation from certified teachers at TM.org.
- Talk it out: Find a therapist through Psychology Today or a local clinic.
“The path to feeling better isn’t always written on a prescription pad,” Schwartz said. “It’s often built through small, steady steps that reconnect you to your body, your mind, and your sense of purpose.”