https://www.wsj.com/articles/transcendental-meditation-for-everyone-1498842465 
<https://www.wsj.com/articles/transcendental-meditation-for-everyone-1498842465>
Transcendental Meditation for Everyone
Bob Roth, chief executive of the David Lynch Foundation, teaches transcendental 
meditation to a range of students, from elementary-school children to CEOs
Photo: Chris Sorensen for The Wall Street Journal

 
<https://www.wsj.com/articles/transcendental-meditation-for-everyone-1498842465>
By
Alexandra Wolfe
June 30, 2017 1:07 p.m. ET

Bob Roth knows his field sounds a little like “woowoo” spirituality, as he 
says. But as a teacher of transcendental meditation, he now works with a 
wide-ranging clientele that includes celebrities such as Katy Perry and Jerry 
Seinfeld, hedge-fund managers, inner-city students, prisoners and veterans. He 
has the same goal for everyone: to teach them the virtues of T.M., as it’s 
called—a practice that involves silently reciting a mantra over and over for 15 
to 20 minutes twice a day.

Proponents say that the practice reduces stress and raises self-awareness. 
Bridgewater founder and co-chairman Ray Dalio, a student of Mr. Roth’s for more 
than a decade and a donor to the foundation, is a believer. The practice has 
been “integral to whatever success I’ve had in life,” he says. “It makes one 
feel like…a ninja in a movie, like you’re doing everything calmly and in slow 
motion.”

Mr. Roth, 66, is chief executive of the David Lynch Foundation, a nonprofit he 
co-founded with the film director in 2005 that is dedicated to teaching 
transcendental meditation, particularly to at-risk populations, “to improve 
their health, cognitive capabilities and performance in life,” as the 
foundation’s website says. Some of its funds come from teaching courses to 
companies and individuals; a four-day training course costs up to $960 a 
person. The foundation has 60 employees in the U.S. as well as partners in 35 
countries.

In early June, Mr. Roth opened the nonprofit’s first office in Washington, 
D.C., where he says he is currently teaching a dozen members of Congress. His 
organization has also been participating in studies in prisons recently. In a 
study published last year 
<http://www.thepermanentejournal.org/issues/search/results/43-the-permanente-journal/original-research-and-contributions/6227-reduced-trauma-symptoms-and-perceived-stress-in-male-prison-inmates-through-the-transcendental-meditation-program-a-randomized-controlled-trial.html>
 in the Permanente Journal, 181 male inmates at the Oregon State Correctional 
Institute and the Oregon State Penitentiary in Salem either took a 
transcendental meditation program through the foundation or did nothing outside 
their usual routine. The researchers found greater reductions in anxiety, 
depression and trauma symptoms in the group that had taken meditation.

Mr. Roth finds an analogy in the sea. “The ocean can be active and turbulent on 
the surface, sometimes with tsunami-like 30-foot waves, but is, by its nature, 
silent at its depth,” he says. “The surface of the mind is the active, noisy, 
thinking mind—often racing, noisy, hyperactive, turbulent. But like the ocean, 
the mind of everyone is quiet, calm, silent at its depth.”

T.M. was developed in India by Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, a physicist turned 
meditation teacher, in the 1950s; it gained popularity in the 1960s when he 
worked with the Beatles and other celebrities.

The son of a doctor and a teacher, Mr. Roth dreamed of being a senator when he 
was young. He started meditating in college at the University of California, 
Berkeley, after a friend suggested it as a way to relax amid the student riots 
on campus.

He was skeptical at first but soon became hooked. After he graduated in 1972, 
he started teaching meditation to children in inner-city schools in San 
Francisco. A few years later, he traveled to Europe to study under Maharishi 
Mahesh Yogi before returning to California to continue teaching over the next 
decade. In 1982, he moved to Washington, D.C., where he eventually met Mr. 
Lynch, the director of “Blue Velvet” and “Twin Peaks,” who had taken up the 
practice in the 1970s. “If you are a human being, [transcendental meditation] 
works,” says Mr. Lynch.

Contrary to what you might expect for a meditation teacher, Mr. Roth often 
wears a suit with a crisp white shirt. (More predictably, he has a serene 
demeanor.) He lives alone in New York, and in his downtime enjoys trying new 
Asian fusion and Italian restaurants and watching sports, especially baseball. 
“I grew up with Willie Mays, who was my first hero,” he says.

He spends half his time teaching and the other half running the organization. 
For all of his new students, instruction is the same. He conducts a short 
ceremony in which he acknowledges past teachers and gives each student a 
mantra—a sound or word that has no meaning and is to be repeated silently 
during the meditation. (The student keeps that mantra forever.) After that, the 
student closes his or her eyes for 20 minutes and silently recites the mantra 
while sitting in a comfortable position.

In follow-up sessions, Mr. Roth discusses the benefits of the practice, 
refreshes students’ techniques and answers any questions they have, often 
meditating alongside them. Critics have said that the practice isn’t any better 
than therapy, exercise or medication at reducing stress, but Mr. Roth points to 
studies that have shown it to be effective, including in reducing high blood 
pressure. “It’s not a matter of ‘either or,’ ” he says. “It’s a wiser matter of 
‘and also.’ ”

The foundation is now participating in a study with the University of Chicago’s 
Crime Lab to research whether T.M. can reduce violence and improve scores in a 
trial with 2,000 children in five Chicago public schools. Next year, the 
research will expand to 800 students in two public schools in New York.

Mr. Seinfeld has been working with Mr. Roth for the past eight years and has 
performed at some of the foundation’s benefits. “It completely changed my 
ability to do work and be active and do the things I want to do,” he says. 
“Wives like to go out to dinner and husbands just want to lie there, but now I 
find I can do anything, with the T.M. to restore me,” he adds with a laugh.

Write to Alexandra Wolfe at alexandra.wo...@wsj.com 
<mailto:alexandra.wo...@wsj.com>
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