You can track the seasons of your burnout by the tabs on your browser. The ones you never close. The sleep that doesn’t stick. The noise that lives in your inbox, even on silent. It’s no wonder that mental clarity has become the new wellness gold. But what if the solution wasn’t more supplements or slower skincare, but something quieter, deeper, and clinically backed?
Inside Dr Marwa Ali’s Wellness Clinic at Harrods in London, beauty meets brain science. Best known for her subtle, softly spoken approach to aesthetics, Dr Ali has now introduced something entirely different. EXOMIND is a treatment not for the face, but for the nervous system.
“It’s something I’ve been searching for for a long time,” Dr Ali explains. “For years, I’ve travelled the world looking for the most effective, tried and tested technologies to support my patients. For the first time, I’ve introduced a treatment specifically for mind wellness to complement aesthetic care. Because a healthy mind is a happier one. And beauty truly starts from within.”
EXOMIND uses Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS) to deliver targeted electromagnetic pulses to the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, the part of the brain responsible for emotional regulation, decision-making and focus. This stimulation enhances neuroplasticity, improves neural communication, and boosts the natural release of mood-stabilising neurotransmitters like dopamine and serotonin. Think of it as a workout for your brain. The treatment is non-invasive, drug-free, and takes under 30 minutes.
The course consists of six sessions, ideally spaced five to ten days apart. Each begins with a detailed consultation, followed by a reclining chair and a sleek device gently positioned on the left side of the head. There’s no discomfort. Most people describe it as surprisingly relaxing. And unlike a massage or supplement boost, the effects don’t fade quickly. They build, with results often lasting between six to twelve months.
The clinical outcomes support the experience. In early patient data, 90 per cent reported improved mental well-being. 77 per cent felt more energised, 71 per cent slept better, and 87 per cent saw greater self-control over food cravings. The effects appear to go beyond clarity, touching on deeper emotional regulation and focus.
Dr Hussain Hashimi, a physician who completed the full six-session course, noted, “I already knew about TMS from my own medical background, so I wasn’t sceptical. What stood out was how seamlessly EXOMIND brought that science into a wellness setting. It’s subtle, it’s calming, and yes, I do feel more emotionally regulated, more focused. That alone is worth it.”
For singer-songwriter Nicola Roberts, the transformation was equally striking. “It’s changed me,” she said. “I just had so much more energy. No brain fog in the mornings. No vitamin in the world could do that. Not even if you slept for a week.”
Designed for anyone seeking a mental reset, whether facing burnout, decision fatigue, or simply wanting to optimise cognitive performance, EXOMIND fits effortlessly into busy routines. It’s a walk-in, walk-out procedure with no downtime and no need to perform or push. In a culture hooked on hustle, that in itself is radical.
Perhaps the most striking thing about EXOMIND is how unperformative it feels. It doesn’t ask for your story. It doesn’t need your belief system. It simply supports the system beneath it all.
As Dr Ali says, “We’ve spent years perfecting the external. It’s time to care just as deeply for the internal.”
And that might just be what modern wellness is really about.
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