We provide meditation training for incarcerated people, formerly incarcerated people and Corrections Officers.
AS FEATURED ON
Almost two million adults are currently incarcerated in America.
Many of them are suffering from trauma, unable to receive support, facing an 80% chance of re-incarceration. This comes at an annual cost of $55 billion to governments, or five times what’s allocated for K-12 education.
What if we could help break the cycle of re-incarceration by reducing the suffering of those inside the system?
Research shows meditation can spark change.
Let’s light the way for change together.
Evidence shows meditation has the power to help heal trauma and release toxic stress. The Light Inside offers a sustainable and scalable solution through meditation, working from the inside out to equip incarcerated people with a simple mental technique to calm the mind, relax the body, and dissolve the lifetime of stress and trauma many have suffered.
This work paves the way for change at the individual level to create a safer and more harmonious environment at the system level, decreasing the likelihood of re-offending. Our vision is to standardize meditation training in all U.S. correctional facilities.
Only light can remove darkness.
ABC Compass
Watch founder Joh Jarvis and The Light Inside on Australian television network ABC’s Compass special, alongside board member Nicho Plowman and Vedic Meditation teacher Barron Hanson.
Channel 10
Watch founder Joh Jarvis and The Light Inside on Australian television network Channel 10’s The Sunday Project.
30-60%
The link between trauma and behavior is well established. A 2014 study found 30-60% of men in state prisons suffered from Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, compared to 3-6% of the general male population. Wolff, Huening, Shi, and Frueh.
500%
The number of incarcerated people in the US has increased by 500% over the last 40 years, mainly due to changes in sentencing law and policy, not changes in crime rates. These trends have resulted in prison overcrowding and financial burdens on state penal systems, despite increasing evidence that large-scale incarceration is not an effective means of achieving public safety. The Sentencing Project.
56-82%
The rates of sexual violence victimization are so high for incarcerated women that some researchers suggest sexual abuse may be a pathway to prison for women, likely through the development of mental illness, including substance abuse. Karlsson and Zielinski.
Step Inside The Circle is an initiative created by the Compassion Prison Project, highlighting the impact of adverse childhood experiences and the flow-on effect to society. The project stresses the importance of care, not punishment, in healing.
Resolution of inner conflicts that can determine human behavior benefits not only those who learn meditation, but those around them as well.
While 1 in 100 Americans is currently incarcerated, there isn’t a single person in this country unaffected by this cycle. Both incarcerated people and corrections staff face the risk of violence and emotional distress daily. Their families and loved ones worry about them. Their children are at higher risk of developing psychological distress. The national average cost of incarceration for one inmate is $65,000/year, while the annual cost at Rikers Island was $556,539 in 2021.
Help support The Light Inside
Help reduce the suffering of the incarcerated.
Help relieve the workplace stress of corrections staff.
Help shape the system for the better.
Help disrupt the cycle of recidivism.
Learning Vedic Meditation
In only 90 minutes per day over four consecutive days, the expert teachers at The Light Inside can train incarcerated people, staff and administrators in Vedic Meditation.
As the grip of stress and trauma unwinds, a deep inward calm sets in, decreasing reactivity and hostility and increasing capacity for patience and reflection.The training fosters self-sufficiency, so those who’ve completed the program can continue practicing the simple, effortless technique on their own thereafter.
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Those who have completed The Light Inside’s meditation training report the following effects and benefits:
Reduced anger, rage and reactivity
Less impulsivity and more patience
Relief from anxiety and depression
A greater sense of calm
Improved mood and outlook
Improved sleep
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Scientific studies supporting the efficacy of meditation abound. Below are some of the most relevant.
MEET OUR TEAM
TLI teachers have been expertly trained for 2,000+ hours in Vedic Meditation practice and theory.
WORKING WITH
Joh Jarvis
FOUNDER & EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
Joh Jarvis is a New York City–based Vedic Meditation teacher who has brought transformative meditation programs into some of the most high-stress and complex environments in the U.S. corrections system. Since 2020, she has led immersive, multi-day meditation trainings inside the Rikers Island jail complex—one of the largest and most challenging jail systems in the country. She has delivered similarly comprehensive programs at the North Dakota State Penitentiary, James River Correctional Center, and Heart River Correctional Center for women, working closely not only with incarcerated residents but also with correctional officers, senior staff, and wardens.
Through these programs, Joh has taught hundreds of people within the prison system how to access inner stillness and release the deep stress that fuels anger, grief, and emotional disconnection.
In 2021, she founded The Light Inside, a nonprofit dedicated to expanding access to meditation for incarcerated individuals and correctional staff across the U.S. Her mission is rooted in the belief that inner transformation is possible for everyone—and that meditation can be a powerful catalyst for healing and change, even in the most unlikely places.
Before dedicating her life to teaching meditation, Joh spent 23 years in the media industry. As a Senior Executive, Executive Producer, and journalist with the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, she led national radio networks, award-winning current affairs programs, and large teams of journalists and content creators. Her background in fast-paced, high-pressure environments gives her a deep, firsthand understanding of stress—and the tools needed to move beyond it.
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I began practicing Vedic Meditation in 2006 as a stressed-out media executive, and I have not looked back since. This ancient technique has given me increasing access to clarity, creativity and happiness I never imagined possible.
These qualities lie within us all—it’s merely a matter of allowing them to emerge. Vedic Meditation works by removing deeply embedded stress from the nervous system, allowing the mind to access peaceful, unbounded layers of tranquility.
In 2013, I began teaching this simple technique in my home country, Australia, before moving to New York City in late 2015. Four years later, just before the Covid-19 pandemic, I started volunteering in Rikers Island jail teaching meditation to men in the jail’s maximum security mental health observation unit. My motivation was that I wanted to share the technique that had helped me so much with a group of people who would otherwise never have access to it.
Before the pandemic forced the temporary closure of jail volunteer programs, I’d trained 20 men and knew this was something I wanted to pursue.
When the pandemic forced us indoors, I began planning how to take the meditation more widely across the US. In 2021 I founded The Light Inside with the mission to take meditation to corrections facilities across the nation, with training programs for incarcerated people and corrections staff. Any workplace or home whose members meditate is calmer and more harmonious. The same can be true for corrections facilities. Not only do the individuals who meditate benefit, but there is potential for the entire organization to operate with less friction.
Meditation has the capacity to begin to resolve the inner conflicts which drive behavior. This benefits meditators, those around them and the wider community.
As of early 2024, The Light Inside has trained nearly 200 incarcerated people and corrections staff in both New York and North Dakota. We are now expanding our programs to other states and expect to have training running in women's prisons in Pennsylvania soon.
We are looking for support for our programs.
If you are a corrections facility representative, I would welcome the opportunity to speak to you about our powerful work.
If you would like to donate financially to support us, we would welcome your help.
Please follow the links on this page to either contact us, receive our newsletter, or donate to our mission.
Dr. Tom O'Connor
RESEARCH & EVALUATION DIRECTOR
Dr. Tom O’Connor is internationally recognized for his communication, facilitation, and cultural-change skills in the specialty area of criminal justice. He currently assists the National Institute of Corrections with the implementation of pretrial reform across the U.S. as a member of its Pretrial faculty. Tom is also a professor of criminal justice at Western Oregon University and has earned multiple degrees in law, philosophy, theology and counseling, wit his PhD thesis focused on Religion and Culture in the U.S. Penal System. Tom currently assists the National Institute of Corrections with the implementation of pretrial reform across the U.S. as a member of its Pretrial faculty.
In his role as the Administrator of Religious Services for the Oregon Department of Corrections, Tom led a team of 24 chaplains and over 2,000 volunteers to develop the Oregon model of humanistic, spiritual, and religious prison chaplaincy. He conducted and published research to show that the model reduces recidivism. The model was featured on National Public Radio and in an award-winning film by Martin Doblmeier called Chaplains.
Tom’s cutting edge work on facilitating whole system change takes him to many states in the U.S. and to countries including New Zealand, Canada, Australia, England, Ireland, and France. His company, Transforming Corrections, challenges and supports criminal justice agencies to be more compassionate, collaborative, and achieve better outcomes, using the most innovative change strategies to develop improved culture, leaders, teamwork, dialogue, coaching and implementation science skills.
Our Advisory Board
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Rev. Dr. Michelle Anne Simmons
Rev. Simmons is the Founder and Executive Director of Why Not Prosper, Inc., an organization helping previously incarcerated women smoothly transition back into society after their release from incarceration, which she established in 2001 after living through much adversity and being incarcerated herself. Through her experiences, she was inspired to turn her life around and help others. In the past 20 years, Rev. Simmons has dedicated thousands of hours of volunteer service to help disenfranchised people through prison outreach, missionary work, and mentorship. In 2015, she received a full and unconditional pardon for her earlier conviction.
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Suzanne Tick
Suzanne Tick is a Vedic Meditation teacher, CEO, textile designer and weaver in New York City. She is the former Creative Director at Luum Textiles and Design Partner with Skyline Design. She has dedicated thousands of hours volunteering with myriad nonprofits and community organizations, such as The New Shul, The Fetzer Institute, and God's Love We Deliver. Suzanne Tick Inc. operates out of Tick Studio in NYC’s East Village and is a NYC-certified Women Owned Business.
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Robert Hammond
Robert Hammond is a Vedic Meditation teacher and Co-Founder and former Executive Director of the High Line NYC, where he led the transformation of an abandoned elevated railway line in Manhattan into an iconic urban park. Robert has served as a consultant or advisor to many companies and organizations, including the Times Square Alliance, Alliance for the Arts, and the National Cooperative Bank. He currently serves on the boards of Little Island, Grounded Solutions Network, and the San Antonio Museum of Art. He is President and Chief Strategy Officer at Therme Group, North America.
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Nicho Plowman
Nicho Plowman is a Vedic Meditation teacher and the co-founder of Insight Timer, one of the largest global online mental health communities in the world, with more than 20 million users, including teachers, spiritual leaders, and meditators. Nicho is an investor and advisor to a number of companies and projects in the well-being sector. Through his foundation, Bay of Grace, Nicho is primarily focused on supporting education programs that bridge the cultural divide between non-indigenous teenagers and indigenous communities in Australia.
Bring The Light Inside to your facility
Help reduce the suffering of the incarcerated.
Help relieve the workplace stress of corrections staff.
Help shape the system for the better.
Help disrupt the cycle of recidivism.