Meet Margaret Chisolm ’80, visual arts with a concentration in film. After graduating from UMBC, Margaret was accepted into graduate school at NYU in cinema studies, but decided to go to medical school instead. She earned her M.D. from the University of Maryland School of Medicine in 1988 and is currently a professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. In 2021, the film student turned doctor added another feather in her cap, author. She published her book, From Survive to Thrive: Living Your Best Life with Mental Illness, which won the Nautilus Book Award in the psychology category. Take it away, Margaret!
Q: What initially brought you to UMBC?
A: I came to UMBC to study film. I initially went to the University of Colorado Boulder for my freshman year. After taking every film class they offered, I decided to come back east, thinking I’d go to NYU. Instead, I found that UMBC had a great program and the experimental filmmaking great, Stan Vanderbeek, was a faculty member. So, I decided to enroll at UMBC.
“I loved being at UMBC in the late 1970s and early 1980s. It is a creative place that allowed me to explore my interests and grow as a person.
I loved the students, faculty, and staff in the film program—and the program as a whole. My time at UMBC prepared me to do whatever I wanted to do—whether it was to go to the best grad school in the country for cinema studies or to medical school. It was a great education and prepared me for a life of learning.
Q: Who in the UMBC community has inspired you or supported you?
A: From my time at UMBC, I now count some of the students, faculty, and staff as lifelong friends. One of them – Richard Chisolm ’82, interdisciplinary studies – is my husband of nearly 44 years. We met while I was a work-study student. I was in a relationship with someone else at the time, but after a year or so, that relationship ended. In June 1980, Richard and I started dating. I graduated in December 1980, and we were married in June 1981. Another, is Leroy Morais. He was the head of the Visual Arts department at UMBC when I was there. He continues to work as a visual artist today and remains a source of inspiration. He has also become a close friend.
Photo right: Margaret Chisolm ’80 and Richard Chisolm ’82 while students at UMBC.

Q: What is your current job?
A: I’m a professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine. I love to learn, and medicine is unparalleled for lifelong learning. I love the combination of scholarship and research, education and teaching, and clinical care that I’ve been able to enjoy. I am able to be creative in designing courses that use the art museum as a teaching space.
In 2015, I was part of the launch of a new initiative in the department: the Paul McHugh Program for Human Flourishing, which I now direct. We use the arts and humanities to explore the big questions with medical learners: what it means to be human, to be a physician, and to lead a good life (for ourselves and our patients). Our goal is to humanize medicine for the good of everyone.


Photos above: Chisolm leading Visual Thinking Strategies discussions with Johns Hopkins med and pre-students, and health professions education leaders from around the country.
Q: Can you tell us about your journey as an author?
A: During the pandemic, I wrote a book for patients with mental illness and their families and loved ones, From Survive to Thrive: Living Your Best Life with Mental Illness. The book describes a tried-and-true plan to help anyone grappling with life’s challenges so they can learn how to flourish. In the book, I use my own story of depression (first while I was a student and later as a new mother) to illustrate my points. The aim of the book is to demystify and destigmatize psychiatric problems and to give hope for a full, flourishing life to those who experience mental illness.
In 2022, From Survive to Thrive won the Nautilus Book Award in the psychology category, was a finalist for the American Book Fest Best Book Award in the Health – Psychology/Mental Health category, and has been the topic of numerous podcast interviews.
I also co-authored a textbook on the Perspectives of Psychiatry, a holistic approach to the diagnosis and treatment of patients with psychiatric problems in 2012.
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Tags: Meet a Retriever, Psychiatry, Retriever Authors, visual arts