You Can Live a More Fulfilling and Happier Life

Ron Schneebaum, MD teaches how

Hi, I’m Ron Schneebaum

I’ve been a pediatrician for over 40 years and regularly witnessed the power and importance of love for the human psyche. I developed a common-sense approach to living a happier and more meaningful life and retired from clinical practice to share my insights with a larger audience. I wrote Bigger Hearted: A Retired Pediatrician’s Prescriptions for Living a Happier Life, and I also offer workshops to help implement these life-changing ideas.

Workshops to Meet the Challenges of

Physician Burnout · Parenting · Personal Growth · Veterans with PTSD · Young Adults

Register for a free introductory session.

Reversing Physician Burnout

Reverse burnout by developing rewarding patient relationships, mastering time-consuming documentation, and increasing office cohesion.

Parenting

Dr. Schneebaum teaches how to raise caring, strong, resilient children. He combines developmental realities with a heart-based understanding of childhood.

Personal Growth

This course teaches how to apply the ideas in Bigger Hearted and live happier, richer lives, experiencing less stress, more meaning, and greater satisfaction.

Veterans Suffering from PTSD

Heal and feel whole again. Dr. Schnnebaum offers this workshop free of charge. It’s his way of thanking you for your service.

Young Adults

Develop ways to navigate these challenging times in a nonjudgmental, supportive, and open environment. This workshop is free of charge, privacy is protected, and enrollment is restricted to participants between 16 and 25 years old.

Purchase Dr. Schneebaum’s Book, Bigger Hearted

This remarkably refreshing book is based on a physician’s forty years in practice and teaches you how to live a happier and more meaningful life.

Praise for Bigger Hearted

“Ron believes that by aligning with love, we can be happier and more successful than most people imagine possible. It’s wonderful.”

— Jack Canfield, co-author of Chicken Soup for the Soul

“This book reads like a seamless mixture of Buddhistic compassionate detachment and Emersonian self-reliance.”

— Dr. Jeffrey Kane, fmr Dean of Academic Affairs at Long Island University