Professional Consultation Services

Licensed Psychologist Mindfulness Expert Researcher & Teacher

Consultation, Keynotes & Workshops

Professional Consultation for Ethical Leadership, Resilience & Workplace Well-Being

Dr. John Chambers Christopher offers comprehensive consultation services, keynotes, and workshop facilitation for organizations, institutions, and individuals seeking to create thriving, values-driven environments that prioritize well-being, ethical leadership, and sustainable performance. With decades of experience as a psychologist, professor, and international speaker, Dr. Christopher specializes in designing and delivering evidence-based programs that integrate mindfulness, neuroscience, leadership psychology, and somatic awareness.

He consults with a wide range of organizations—corporate teams, health care systems, educational institutions, and nonprofits—throughout the U.S. and internationally. His work supports leaders, executives, and professionals in fostering integrity-based leadership, emotional intelligence, and resilience under pressure.

Leadership Workshops & Executive Coaching

Dr. Christopher’s leadership programs are uniquely crafted to guide high-level professionals, executives, and mission-driven leaders toward mindful, ethical, and sustainable leadership. His workshops and executive coaching draw from the latest research in neuroscience, organizational psychology, and mind-body medicine to help leaders:

  • Navigate complex challenges with clarity, emotional regulation, and grace

  • Foster psychologically safe environments that promote authenticity and trust

  • Practice self-awareness and cultivate resilience in the face of stress and burnout

  • Integrate mindfulness-based decision-making into high-stakes contexts

  • Embrace ethical leadership as a foundation for lasting cultural change

  • Support diversity, inclusion, and relational attunement in leadership roles

These interactive workshops may include experiential mindfulness exercises, values-based inquiry, somatic awareness training, and reflective practices that translate directly into real-world leadership behavior.

Organizational Consultation & Culture Change

Dr. Christopher provides strategic consultation for institutions and businesses seeking to improve employee well-being, performance, morale, and workplace culture. His consultation services address:

  • Burnout prevention and recovery

  • Stress reduction protocols

  • Emotional intelligence and interpersonal skill-building

  • Work-life integration for professionals

  • Mindfulness training for leadership teams and staff

  • Healthcare and wellness program design rooted in mind-body integration

  • Ethical decision-making and integrity-focused leadership development

Each program is tailored to the unique values, challenges, and vision of the organization. Drawing from over 30 years of academic, clinical, and contemplative training, Dr. Christopher helps teams navigate transformation with skillful, heart-centered guidance.

Keynotes, Retreats & Custom Programs

Dr. Christopher is available for keynote presentations and custom-designed retreats that speak to the intersection of science, ethics, and mindfulness. Whether addressing executive teams, clinicians, educators, or students, his talks are known for their warmth, depth, and real-world applicability.

He has spoken nationally and internationally on themes such as:

  • The Neuroscience of Resilient Leadership

  • Mindfulness, Meaning & Moral Development in the Workplace

  • Healing the Disconnect: Mind-Body Integration in a Fragmented World

  • The Psychology of Ethical Leadership in High-Stakes Professions

To explore his previous keynote appearances, including a Grand Rounds lecture delivered to the Department of Medicine at the Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth, view his featured talk on YouTube.

Core Topics Include:

  • Ethical and mindful leadership grounded in values and service

  • Cultivating emotional resilience and reducing reactivity

  • Developing a workplace culture rooted in compassion and mutual respect

  • Empowering leaders to prevent burnout through embodied self-care

  • Translating mindfulness into daily leadership practices

  • Using somatic awareness to strengthen clarity and interpersonal impact

  • Advancing well-being as a performance strategy, not a luxury

This integrative approach is ideal for teams and leaders who are ready to go beyond surface-level “wellness” programs and cultivate true cultural transformation—starting from the inside out.

Work With John christopher PhD

Consultation, Coaching, Psychotherapy & Research

About Dr. John Christopher

Before going into full-time psychotherapy private practice, John was a Professor for 23 years at Dartmouth, the University of Washington, Montana State University, and the University of Guam. 

John is a Fellow of the American Psychological Association and a past-president of the Society of Theoretical and Philosophical Psychology (division of the APA).

John is also a Fellow of the Mind & Life Institute. He was a founding member of the Mind & Life Institute’s Ethics, Education, and Human Development Project to develop a pedagogy and curriculum to promote the Dalai Lama’s vision of teaching ethics in schools. John Christopher PhD is a licensed psychologist in the states of Montana and New York.

  • Individual psychotherapy

  • Anxiety concerns

  • Stress management

  • Depression and mood disorders

  • Emotion regulation

  • Chronic pain, insomnia and medical challenges

  • Spirituality and self-growth

  • Self-esteem concerns

  • Transitions, life challenges and coping skills

  • Mindfulness training, MBSR, self-care and well-being

Clinical Expertise

  • Psychosomatic Medicine

  • Trauma, PTSD

  • Sexuality and identity concerns

  • Codependency concerns

  • Attachment difficulties and family of origin issues

  • Grief, bereavement and loss

  • Mindfulness expertise for business and organizations

  • Health care professionals, burnout prevention

  • Men's issues

  • Professional supervision, college students and career

mindfulness & Meditation routines

Scholarly Publications

(underlined links may be downloaded)

Christopher, J. C. (2018). Let It Be: Mindfulness and Releasement—Neglected Dimensions of Well-Being. Journal of Theoretical & Philosophical Psychology, 38 (2), 61-76.

Marecek, J., & Christopher, J. C. (2017).  Is Positive Psychology an Indigenous Psychology?  In N. J. L. Brown, T. Lomas, & F. J. Eiroá-Orosa (Eds.), The Routledge international handbook of critical positive psychology (pp. 84-98).  London, UK: Routledge.

Christopher, J. C. (2016). Hermeneutics and developmental psychology. In H. L. Miller (Ed.), The SAGE encyclopedia of theory in psychology (pp. 412-414). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.

Christopher, J. C., Marecek, J., Wendt, D. C. (2015). Culture revisited: A reply to comments, American Psychologist, 70(7), 662-663. doi: 10.1037/a0039203

Christopher, J. C., Gable, S., & Goodman, D. M. (2015). Theoretical bases of psychotherapeutic practice. In J. Martin, J. Sugarman & K. Slaney (Eds.), The Wiley Handbook of Theoretical and Philosophical Psychology (pp. 424-440). New York: Wiley.

Felton, T., Nored, L, Christopher, J. C. (2015). Examining the impact of mindfulness training on counseling students’ perceptions of stress throughout a mindfulness training course. Mindfulness, 6 (2), 159-169. DOI: doi: 10.1007/s12671-013-0240-8

Christopher, J. C., Wendt, D. C., Marecek, J. & Goodman, D. M. (2014). Critical cultural awareness: Contributions to a globalizing psychology. American Psychologist, 69 (7), 645-655. doi: 10.1037/a0036851

Christopher, J. C. (2014). Putting “positive” and “psychology” in perspective: The role of Indian psychology. Psychological Studies. DOI 10.1007/s12646-014-0256-8.

Christopher, J. C. & Howe, K. (2014). Future directions for a more multiculturally competent (and humble) positive psychology.  In J. Teramoto-Pedrotti  & L. M. Edwards (Eds.), Perspectives on the intersection of multiculturalism & positive Psychology (pp. 253-266). New York: Springer.

Türk Smith, S., Smith, K. D., Christopher, J. C. (2014). Respecting the complexity of values systems: Psychological realism and the case of Turkish culture. In S. J. Kulich, L. Weng & M. H. Prosser (Eds.), Value dimensions and their contextual dynamics across cultures (pp. 401-427). Shanghai: Shanghai Foreign Language Education Press.

Christopher, J. C., Oswal, N., & Deokar, N. (2013). Perspectives on mindfulness from the Buddha's homeland: A focus group inquiry. Counseling & Spirituality, 32 (2),  33-58.

Campbell, J. C., & Christopher, J. C., (2012). Teaching Mindfulness to Create Effective Counselors. Journal of Mental Health Counseling, 34 (3), 213-226.

Christopher, J. C., Chrisman, J., Trotter, M., Schure, M., Dahlen, P. & Christopher, S. (2011). The long-term influence of mindfulness training on counselors and psychotherapists: A qualitative inquiry. Journal of Humanistic Psychology, 51 (3), 318-349.

Christopher, J. C. (2010). Situating positive psychology. In C. R. Snyder, S. Lopez & J. Teramoto-Pedrotti (Eds.), Positive Psychology: The Scientific and Practical Explorations of Human Strengths, 2nd Edition (pp. 80-82). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.

Christopher, J. C. (2010). Peak experiences, mindfulness practices, and the search for meaning. In M. Trotter-Mathison, J. M. Koch, S. Sanger, & T. M. Skovholt (Eds.), Voices from the field: Defining moments in counselor and therapist development (pp. 37-40). New York: Routledge.

Christopher, J. C. & Maris, J. (2010). Integrating Mindfulness As Self-Care Into Counselling and Psychotherapy Training. Counselling and Psychotherapy Research, 10, 114-125.

Christopher, J. C., Foster, G., & James, S. (2009). A hermeneutic approach to culture and psychotherapy. In H. D. Friedman & P. K. Revera (Eds.), Abnormal psychology: New research (pp. 225-261). New York: Nova Science Publishers.

Chrisman, J. A., Christopher, J. C., & Lichtenstein, S. J. (2009). Qigong as a mindfulness practice for counseling students: A qualitative inquiry. Journal of Humanistic Psychology. 49, 236-257.

Christopher, J. C. (2008). Culture, moral topographies, and interactive personhood. Journal of Theoretical & Philosophical psychology, 27, 168-191.

Christopher, J. C., & Campbell, R. C.  (2008). An interactivist-hermeneutic metatheory for positive psychology. Theory & Psychology, 18, 675-697.

Christopher, J. C., & Hickinbottom, S. (2008). Positive psychology, ethnocentrism, and the disguised ideology of individualism. Theory & Psychology, 18, 563-589. Christopher, J. C., Slife, B. D., & Richardson, F. C. (2008). Thinking through positive psychology. Theory & Psychology, 18, 555-561.

Hoshmand, L. T., & Christopher, J. C. (2008). Theorizing on the cultural. Journal of Theoretical & Philosophical psychology, 27, 141-145.

Smith, A. J., Thorngren, J., Christopher, J. C. (2008).  Rural mental health counseling.  In I. Marini & M. A. Stebnicki (Eds.), The Professional counselor’s desk reference (pp. 263-274).  New York: Springer.

Schure, M., Christopher, J. C., Christopher, S. E. (2008). Mind/body medicine and the art of self-care: Teaching mindfulness to counseling students through yoga, meditation and qigong. Journal of Counseling & Development, 86, 47-56.

Christopher, J. C., & Bickhard, M. H. (2007). Culture, self, and identity: Interactivist contributions to a metatheory for cultural psychology. Culture & Psychology, 13, 259-295.

Christopher, J. C. (2007). Situating positive psychology. In C. R. Snyder & S. Lopez (Eds.), Positive psychology: The scientific and practical explorations of human strengths (pp. 90-91). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.

Christopher, J. C., Foster, G., & James, S. (2007). A hermeneutic approach to culture and psychotherapy. In A. Columbus (Ed.),  Advances in Psychology Research, Volume 48 (pp. 1-38). New York: Science Publishers.

Smith, K. D., Türk-Smith, S., & Christopher, J. C.  (2007). What Defines the Good Person? Cross-Cultural Comparisons of Experts’ Models with Lay Prototypes. Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 38, 333-360.

Christopher, J. C. (2006). Hermeneutics and the moral dimension of cultural psychotherapy. In L. T. Hoshmand (Ed.),  Culture, Psychotherapy, and Counseling:  Critical and Integrative Perspectives (pp. 179-203). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage. 

Christopher, J. C., & Smith, A. (2006). A hermeneutic approach to culture and psychotherapy. In R. Moody, & S. Palmer (Eds.), Race, culture and psychotherapy: Critical perspective in multicultural practice (pp. 265-280). New York: Brunner/Routledge.

Christopher, J. C., Christopher, S. E., Dunnagan, T., & Schure, M. (2006). Teaching self-care through mindfulness practices: The application of yoga, meditation and qi gong to counselor training. Journal of Humanistic Psychology, 46, 494-509. 

Newsome, S., Christopher, J. C., Dahlen, P., & Christopher, S. (2006). Teaching counselors self-care through mindfulness practices: the application of mindfulness-based stress reduction to counselor training. Teachers College Record. 108, 1881-1900.

Christopher, S., Knows His Gun McCormick, A., Smith, A., & Christopher, J. C. (2005). Development of an interviewer training manual for a cervix health project on the Apsáalooke reservation. Health Promotion Practice, 6, 414-422.

Christopher, J. C. (2004). Moral visions of developmental psychology. In B. Slife, J. S. Reber, & F. C. Richardson (Eds.), Critical thinking about psychology: Hidden assumptions and plausible alternatives (pp. 207-231). Washington, D. C.: APA Press.

Christopher, J. C., Nelson, T., & Nelson, M. D. (2004). Culture and character education: Problems of interpretation in a multicultural society. Journal of Theoretical and Philosophical Psychology, 23, 81-101.

Christopher, J. C., Richardson, F. C., & Christopher, S. E. (2003). Philosophical Hermeneutics: A Metatheory to Transcend Dualism and Individualism in Western Psychology. History & Theory of Psychology Eprint Archive (HTP Prints). http://htpprints.yorku.ca/.

Campbell, R. L., Christopher, J. C., & Bickhard, M. H. (2002). Values and the self: An interactivist foundation for moral development. Theory & Psychology, 12, 795-823.

Christopher, J. C., Manaster, G. J., Campbell, R. L., & Weinfeld, M. (2002). Peak experiences, social interest, and moral reasoning: An exploratory study. The Journal of Individual Psychology, 58, 35-51

Smith, K. D., Christopher, J. C., Richardson, F. C., Christopher, S. E., Della Fave, A., Massimini, F, Bhawuk, D. P. S. (2002). Post-Newtonian metatheories in the natural sciences and in cross-cultural psychology: Post-Newtonian worldviews. In P. Boski, F. J. R. van der Vijver, and A. M. Chodynicka (Eds), New directions in cross-cultural psychology (pp. 107-125). Warsaw: Polish Psychological Association.

Christopher, J. C. (2001).  Culture and psychotherapy: Toward a hermeneutic approach. Psychotherapy: Theory, Research, Practice, and Training, 38, 115-128.

Christopher, J. C.,  Bickhard, M. H., & Lambeth, G. S. (2001). Otto Kernberg’s object relations theory: A metapsychological critique. Theory & Psychology, 11, 687-711.

Christopher, S., Christopher, J. C., & Dunnagan, T. (2000). Culture’s impact on health risk appraisal psychological well-being questions. American Journal of Health Behavior, 24, 338-348.

Campbell, R. L., and Christopher, J. C. (1999). Factional science, intradisciplinary cooperation, and the study of mind. Dialogues in Psychology [Online], 15.0, 56 paragraphs. Available: http://hubcap.clemson.edu/psych/Dialogues/1.0.html [1999, September 11].

Christopher, J. C. (1999). Situating psychological well-being; Exploring the cultural roots of its theory and research. Journal of Counseling and Development, 77, 141-152.

Richardson, F. C., & Christopher, J. C. (1999). Clashing views of social inquiry. In F. C. Richardson, B. J. Fowers, & C. Guignon, Re-envisioning psychology: Moral dimensions of theory and practice (173-198). San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.

Christopher, J. C., & Fowers, B. J. (1998). Placing culture at the center of multiculturalism: Moral visions and intercultural dialogue. Dialogues in Psychology [Online], 1.0, 56 paragraphs. Available: http://hubcap.clemson.edu/psych/Dialogues/1.0.html [1998, September 14].

Lightsey, O. R., & Christopher, J. C. (1997). Stress buffers and dysphoria in a non-Western population. Journal of Counseling and Development, 75, 451-459

Schmitz, S. E., & Christopher, J. C. (1997). Trouble in Smurftown: The moral visions of youth gangs on GuamChild Welfare, 76,  411-428 .

Campbell, R. L., & Christopher, J. C. (1996). Moral development theory: A critique of its Kantian presuppositions. Developmental Review, 16, 1-47.

Campbell, R. L., & Christopher, J. C. (1996). Beyond the noumenal self: Eudaimonism and the prospects for moral personality. Developmental Review, 16, 108-123.

Christopher, J. C. (1996). Counseling’s inescapable moral visionsJournal of Counseling and Development, 75, 17-25.

Christopher, J. C., & Fowers, B. J. (1996). Multiculturalism, culture and moral visions. In What is Multiculturalism in Psychology and Education? Proceedings of the 12th Annual Teachers College Roundtable Discussion on Cross-Cultural Psychology and Education (pp. 11-22). New York: Columbia University.

Bickhard, M. H., & Christopher, J. C. (1994). The influence of early experience on personality development. New Ideas in Psychology, 12, 229-252.

Christopher, J. C., & Bickhard, M. H. (1994). The persistence of basic mistakes: Rexploring psychopathology in Individual Psychology. Individual Psychology, 50, 223-231.

Richardson, F. C., & Christopher, J. C. (1993). Social theory as practice: Metatheoretical options for social inquiry. Journal of Theoretical and Philosophical Psychology, 13, 137-153.

Stark, K. D., Humphrey, L. L., Laurent, J., Livingston, R., Christopher, J. C. (1993). Cognitive, behavioral, and family factors in the differentiation of depressive and anxiety disorders during childhood. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 61, 878-886.

Stark, K. D., Christopher, J. C., & Dempsey, M. (1993). Depression. In A. Bellack & M. Hersen (Eds.), Handbook of behavior therapy in the psychiatric setting (pp. 427-452).  New York: Plenum.

Stark, K. D., Dempsey, M., & Christopher, J. C. (1993). Depressive disorders. In R. T. Ammerman, C. G. Last, & M. Hersen (Eds.), Handbook of prescriptive treatment for children and adolescents (pp. 115-143). Boston: Allyn & Bacon.

Christopher, J. C., & Bickhard, M. H. (1992). Remodeling the as if in Adler's concept of the life style. Individual Psychology, 48, 76-85.

Christopher, J. C., Bickhard, M. H., & Lambeth, G. S.  (1992). Splitting Kernberg; A critique of Otto Kernberg's notion of splitting. Psychotherapy, 29, 481-485.

Christopher, J. C. (1993). The role of individualism in psychological well-being: Exploring the interplay of ideology, culture, and social science. Dissertation Abstracts International, 53(12-A), 4206.

Spradling, V., & Christopher, J. C. (1990). Working with shyness. In The clearing house for structured thematic groups and innovative programs in mental health. Richmond: George Mason University Press.

Christopher, J. C. (1985). The mind-body relationship and its influence upon lifestyles. Synthesis, 1, 14-17.

My Research

My research is interdisciplinary in nature. I pursue themes that I first addressed through an undergraduate major I designed at the University of Michigan entitled The Psychological and Philosophical Foundations of Culture. As a social scientist, my passion is in exploring how culture shapes the self, identity, meaning, moral development, and psychological well-being. Much of my scholarly work examines Western psychology from a cross-cultural and historical perspective. I have been particularly interested in how Western assumptions about the nature of the person, or self, and the good life, underlie Western psychological theories, research, and practice. In particular, I have examined how individualism influences a variety of psychological fields.

Most of my current research considers the limitations of understanding positive psychology and psychological well-being and explores the nature of psychological well-being in non-individualistic cultures. Other areas that I have addressed include moral development, character education, and psychotherapy. I have spent a considerable amount of time studying indigenous psychological traditions in non-Western cultures. This has included participant observation in various forms of mindfulness training as well as fieldwork learning from traditional healers and shamans. This research has provided me with a vantage point from which to get more clarity about what is presupposed in Western understanding of well-being but has also expanded my training in methods that are increasingly being used in behavioral medicine. I see this program of work as critical for the practice of counseling and psychotherapy in general and for working with clients of differing ethnic backgrounds and international clients in particular. Moreover, it has implications for related fields such as public health, health promotion/education, character education, and personality and developmental psychology.

More recently my focus has been developing alternative notions of the self and of well-being that aim to transcend many of the conceptual limitations of much of current theory and research. While this work has been over twenty-five years in the making, it has only been in the past five that I have been able to integrate the two main strains in my intellectual formation – philosophical hermeneutics and interactivism – into what I see as a compelling framework.

One area where I’ve applied my theoretical work is in mind/body medicine and stress management which I’ve been teaching for over 25 years. I bring over 30 years of experience practicing meditation and yoga and 15 years of practicing qigong to the practice of integrative medicine. I have been pioneering the application of mindfulness to counselor training. My graduate counseling class “Mind-Body Medicine and the Art of Self-Care” was recently featured in article in Counseling Today, the monthly magazine of the American Counseling Association. My research articles on using mindfulness practices in the training of counselors appear in the Journal of Counseling & DevelopmentThe Journal of Humanistic Psychology, and The Teachers College Record. The 2006 article “Teaching self-care through mindfulness practices: The application of yoga, meditation and qi gong to counselor training” is currently listed on the Journal of Humanistic Psychology’s website as its most frequently read article.

I have attempted to publish my work in a variety of journals. Some, like the Journal of Theoretical and Philosophical Psychology and Theory & Psychology,  I chose because they allow me to pursue the furthest reaches of my conceptual work. Other outlets, such as The American Psychologist, The Journal of Counseling and Development and Psychotherapy: Theory, Research, Practice, and Training I chose because I am deeply committed to making theoretical psychology practically meaningful to practitioners and bridging the divide that can sometimes exist between theoretical scholarship and the actual practice of psychotherapy and counseling.