Sign up for the TCME
e-Newsletter, Mindful Bytes!

Get updates, information, special offers, articles and more. The TCME e-Newsletter will help you keep up with all the goings on at TCME.
Sign Up today!
 
 
 
 

"I have enjoyed each and every one of the Teleconferences so much that I am now trying to schedule patients around them. I feel that the TCME is extremely valuable and am planning to join as a member this week."
-Danielle Paciera, LDN, RD, Tulane University

From tele-conference participant (The call) "it was great! I appreciated how you modeled these skills for us as you facilitated the group! I also loved hearing the experiences of others and learning about different resources. " Cathy C

"The entire concept of 'curiosity' was new to me with respect to nutrition counseling. It seemed like a very unlikely word to include. I came to understand, however, how it can increase our awareness of our/client's behaviors when taking a more curious stance (I wonder how much food It will take to fill me up/satisfy me?) rather than a more judgmental, negative stance such as "I'm not supposed to eat more than this for lunch, but I seem extra hungry today!". Judy T

 
 
 
  Why Become a Member?
The Center for Mindful Eating provides a number of great benefits, including Education Events, Mindful Eating based protocols, professional interaction and more.
Join Now!
 
 
 
 

The Board
Overview  |   Board

(Ms) Dharmacharini Amala, Co-founder
Amala is currently the Director of Aryaloka Buddhist Center, in Newmarket New Hampshire. Her education in and practice of Buddhism began more than 30 years ago. Amala undertook intensive training and was ordained into the Western Buddhist Order in the year 2000. She has also participated in the professional training for teaching Mindfulness Based Stress Reduction at the University of Massachusetts Medical School Center for Mindfulness. Her University training includes a Bachelors’ with Honors degree in Anthropology and Religious Studies from the University of California at Santa Cruz. Amala presently teaches and consults on meditation and Buddhism in a number of contexts. She is a proud parent of two wonderful teenagers and enjoys living in the quiet of rural New Hampshire.