The book that started it all
Brain Longevity
The breakthrough program that helped define a field.
This is the work that introduced a then-radical idea to the world: that the brain is not destined to simply fade with age, and that how we live — what we eat, how we move, how we handle stress, and how we tend to our inner life — shapes the mind over a lifetime.
Decades later, it remains the clearest doorway into Dr. Dharma's thinking, and the foundation everything else in this library is built upon.
First published 1997 · Translated into a dozen languages · The foundation of Brain Longevity
Browse the collection
The Bookshelf
Each title carries a piece of three decades of work. Choose where to begin.
His life's work
What Dr. Dharma Writes About
Across every book, a few ideas return again and again. Knowing them is the easiest way to find the volume that belongs in your hands first.
The idea he is known for
Brain Longevity
Your mind is not destined to simply fade.
He pioneered the idea that the brain can be cared for and kept sharp through the way we live — what we eat, how we move, how we handle stress, and how we quiet the mind. It reframed aging from something that happens to us into something we can take part in.
An ancient practice, modern eyes
Meditation as Medicine
Stillness as a daily discipline, not a mystery.
Much of his writing treats meditation plainly and practically — a repeatable practice with real effects on how we think and feel, including the simple twelve-minute exercise he returns to throughout his work.
Two worlds, taken seriously
Where Science Meets Spirit
A doctor who refused to choose between them.
His books live at the meeting point of clinical medicine and contemplative wisdom — the throughline of a career that began in the operating room and turned, in time, toward prevention and the inner life.
Meaning as part of health
Living Your Dharma
Purpose is not separate from wellbeing.
He writes about what he calls Spiritual Fitness — the idea that meaning, service, and remembering what matters most are not soft extras but central to a whole and healthy life.
The idea that changed everything
Your mind is more in your hands than they told you
For most of medicine's history, the aging brain was treated as a fixed fate. Dr. Dharma never believed that. His life's work rests on a more hopeful idea, that the way you live, eat, move, rest, and tend your spirit, shapes how your mind ages. Not a guarantee. A measure of control, where everyone said there was none.
He has spent fifty years proving how much is still up to you.