“This is the best job I could ever dream of.” —Matthew August

Bringing the TM technique to a new generation

It’s a beautiful experience to give the Transcendental Meditation technique to new generations. They blossom into happier students, and school becomes easier and more enjoyable for them. It is truly a lovely thing to see!
—Yanira Funes, teaches TM to underserved students in Los Angeles

 


A great career choice to do what you love

Everyone’s dream is to find a way to earn a living doing what they love. For me, TM has been a great career choice. Whether you are teaching corporate executives, kids in school, or veterans facing PTSD, people are so deeply appreciative when they find an effective tool offering profound personal development. It’s amazing to see how someone who has been suffering from PTSD and insomnia for years or decades can start feeling better in just a few days.
—Joshua Pittman, teaches TM to students, veterans, and people without housing in New York City

 


Giving kids a tool for every part of their lives

Most service-oriented careers aim at helping one area of a person’s life. By teaching the TM technique, I am giving these kids a tool that enriches every part of their life, whether it be their physical or mental health, their ability to achieve more at school or work, or their relationships. I could not ask for a better job.
—Monica Sanny, TM teacher and school program coordinator in California

 


Helping people find real relief and witnessing their transformation

Teaching the Transcendental Meditation technique has been so rewarding. It’s hard to put into words the satisfaction one gets from helping people find real relief and witnessing the transformation that takes place in each individual. I’m full of gratitude.
—Angie Boulton, teaches TM to students and faculty in Los Angeles

 


This work is an honor and a blessing

The social worker’s credo is not to make decisions for another person, but to empower them to make decisions for themselves. TM directly supports this mission. I get to witness in our program’s students the development of more clarity, energy, autonomy, and joy. I consider this work an honor and a blessing.
—Rachel Katz, Women’s Initiative and Special Projects for the David Lynch Foundation

 


The reward of seeing peace on their faces

It is very rewarding, because we meditate with the kids one-on-one. And when you look over at them when they’re meditating, and you just see that peace on their faces, that’s the reward right there.
—Rama Hall, TM teacher in San Francisco schools

 


An easy and profound tool for students to empower themselves

I have seen the transformation that TM brings in the school culture and in individuals. My students are so grateful to have this easy and profound tool to empower themselves with this technique that they will carry with them throughout their lives.
—Sara Costello, lead TM teacher in a Los Angeles high school program

 


Being a TM teacher is being in the happiness profession

I love to see my students transform after their first meditation—to see them relax and, for the first time, feel who their true self is. But what I love even more is when they tell me how they feel after they’ve been meditating for six months—how they feel so much happier and stronger inside, how they are a better version of themselves. Being a TM teacher is really being in the happiness profession, and that is amazingly fulfilling! Part of life is giving back, in whatever way that you can give back. I wanted to become a TM teacher so that could be my contribution to society.
—Vidya Schechtman, supervises 400 middle school students who practice TM twice a day at school

 


Bringing the TM technique to students

The thing I like most about being a TM teacher is when one of my students tells me about how their meditation has enriched their life. Of all the things I could do to help people, I feel this has the greatest positive impact—and when I hear that reflection from someone I’ve taught to meditate, that is the greatest payment I could receive.
—Noah Schechtman, site director for three public schools where 2,000 students, teachers, and staff practice TM 

 


Giving students the gift of themselves

The world needs strong, grounded, and empowered young people now more than ever, and I can’t think of a more powerful way to support that than by giving students the gift of themselves through the TM technique.
—Kennidy Stood, teaches TM to middle school students in Los Angeles

 


Providing a way to inner peace and safety

There are no words to describe the experience of providing a way to inner peace and the safety that lies within to a child who has had serious trauma. Young people feel the relief right away and deeply appreciate this powerful gift of peace.
—Lynn Kaplan, regional director of the David Lynch Foundation in Los Angeles

 


Bringing the TM technique to other veterans healing from war

Because I’m a veteran myself, I also bring TM to other vets who are healing from the stresses of wartime conditions. I consider myself fortunate to be able to bring this powerful technique to those whose lives might otherwise remain troubled.
—Peter Trivelas, teaches TM to veterans and at-risk students in Los Angeles

 


Empowering young women and girls with the greatest gift

I am particularly passionate about teaching TM to empower young women and girls who have experienced trauma and abuse. It is inspiring to see how teaching this simple technique to these young women has a positive impact not only for them, but also for their children and families. With each girl I teach, I can see a ripple of positivity that will impact generations to come. When I teach someone to meditate, I feel like I’m giving them the greatest gift that they could ever receive. There’s nothing more profound, nothing more essential to life than the ability to be with your Self.
—Donielle Freeberg, taught TM for several years to teenage girls who had experienced trauma

 


An avenue for young people committed to a better world

The David Lynch Foundation is the best, because it gives young people who are committed to making a better world an avenue to work in. I have taught hundreds of kids to meditate who live in very rough neighborhoods. Their lives have been changed for the good, and they only got this opportunity because of the generosity of the David Lynch Foundation. This is the best job I could ever dream of.
—Matthew August, TM teacher for underserved high school students in the San Francisco Bay Area


Learn More

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Harbour Hodder
Author: Harbour Hodder