Pride - Episode 2 Transcript
adrienne maree brown
I grew up very proud of my dad, very proud of, like, who he was as a
person, and then we went through this transition where I started
understanding more about the military and really questioning everything
about his life and what he'd been willing to do or not do.
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Raveena Aurora
Activist and author adrienne maree brown.
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adrienne maree brown
It all came to a huge head where, my dad was working in the Pentagon,
and they were in a winding up for war in Afghanistan and Iraq. And we
ended up in a car together, screaming at each other, both of us, that
the other was a terrorist. And I ended up getting out of the car, and we
went for a long time without talking.
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Raveena Aurora
Welcome to Season 2 of Awaken, a podcast from The Rubin Museum of Art
that uses art to explore the dynamic path to enlightenment and what it
means to "wake up." I'm singer and songwriter Raveena Aurora and I've
been learning about the transformative power of art throughout my life.
Since time immemorial, art has been used as a portal to better
understand ourselves and the world around us. At the Rubin, a museum
dedicated to art from the Himalayas, we believe art can inspire us on a
path to awakening. And in this series, we're using a specific artwork,
the mandala, to explore this journey and the emotions that accompany us
on the way.
But what is a mandala? A mandala is a guide. People from many cultures
and religious traditions around the world use mandalas as maps to
navigate their inner lives, including their emotions. Throughout this
series, with the guidance of scientists, Buddhist teachers, writers,
artists, and activists, we wrestle with five challenging emotions—anger,
pride, attachment, envy, and ignorance—to help us take a new perspective
on how emotions can influence our day-to-day experiences…and what they
might be able to teach us if we get curious.
In this episode: pride
Dzogchen Ponlop Rinpoche is a leading Buddhist teacher and one of the
foremost scholars and meditation masters in the Nyingma and Kagyu
schools of Tibetan Buddhism.
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Dzogchen Ponlop Rinpoche
Pride, it's really an interesting klesha here. And pride is closely
connected to ego, self-centricity. And pride is primarily a—kind of like
a misperception of or exaggerated perception of one's own positive
qualities, and looking down on others as not having so much of such
qualities.
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Raveena Aurora
Kleshas are the afflicted emotions that cloud our view, but each has a
powerful and life-altering antidote. For pride, it is the suspension of
judgment, of yourself, of others, openness to all that is, with
curiosity and a balanced perspective.
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Dzogchen Ponlop Rinpoche
Pride can be positive, in the sense that if we can be truly confident of
our own self, self-confidence, if we can truly appreciate one's self,
like self-acceptance, that kind of pride is a very positive thing. True
acceptance of self. Like, who we really are.
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Raveena Aurora
In this episode we explore pride in all its forms. Psychologist Tracy
Dennis-Tiwary is a professor of psychology and neuroscience.
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Tracy Dennis-Tiwary
We think of emotions like shame and pride as not being inborn emotions
at all, because they're socially constructed. And the simplest way to
think about that is an emotion that's socially constructed is very
dependent on the values of a given culture or historical period. So
you're prideful about things that you have learned in developing in a
certain society are worthy of being prideful of you. You have these
kinds of experiences in reference to a developed sense of self, which
also develops in a context in a culture and a historical period.
And so with pride, I'd say, you have to have as a starting point, the
appraisal that, I am a self, I'm an individual self and a self that has
agency in the world is a valued self. So you are appraising in the
moment, is this sense of myself as a positive, powerful self? Is it
being threatened or supported? That's the appraisal part. Like just how
is the world connecting with my sense of self?
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Raveena Aurora
This is really interesting because not only does pride exist in the
context of what is expected societally and culturally but it also sets
clear boundaries between you and others. Pride thrives in judgment.
Activist and author adrienne maree brown.
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adrienne maree brown
When I'm judging, it's like, I have a predetermined idea of what someone
is supposed to act like, or be like, or what the success would even look
like. When I let that go, all of a sudden, I can be present for what's
actually possible and what's actually happening, which is often much
more interesting than I could've predicted, and which is often much more
moving because it's rooted in the authentic experience of the people who
are living through it,
We all live inside of a system that's actually pretty difficult to
navigate emotionally, financially, spiritually, physically. And when
people are struggling with that, sometimes they turn to drugs, sometimes
they turn to alcohol, sometimes they turn to sex work as a mode of
survival, and other things."
And it, very early on for me, helped me normalize that I'm not better or
worse than anyone else. And the good news is that I can be in it. It's
like, my work is to, like, keep trying, keep learning, keep
experimenting with "this thing called life," as Prince said
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Dzogchen Ponlop Rinpoche
When you have this misperception or the wrong concept of oneself and
believing in that, then that creates this sense of big separation,
between self and others.
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Raveena Aurora
And this is where pride can be so challenging. adrienne maree brown has
explored the ways in which organizations can be more collaborative, more
cooperative and less entrenched in competition, which is often founded
in pride.
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adrienne maree brown
I think if you were raised in an environment where competition is how
you establish your right to exist and your worth to others, then I think
that's where we end up with that kind of, "OK, I have to be boastful, I
have to project a confidence that I may or may not actually have, but I
have to project that. I have to seem as if I know what I'm doing." And I
think that's when we end up in the danger zone. It's one of the reasons,
actually, I identify as a post-capitalist, and I identify as a
post-nationalist.
Because I feel like the systems of this nation-state, the systems of
this economy, actually, the tendency is towards that competition and
cruelty that keep us from attending to each other as human beings as
systems where care is actually the only thing we need to be attending to.
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Tracy Dennis-Tiwary
We have this incredible opportunity because it's such a salient,
powerful emotion to dig deep and reassess. Well, what is it that forms
the basis of our self value? It's rather, what's my purpose and my
purposes in life that make me feel most myself, that give me the
greatest sense of meaning, that helps me hitch into something that's
greater than myself and elevates me? Is my pride based on my ephemeral
achievements or is it based on what difference I'm going to make
afterwards when I'm gone? And I could die tomorrow. I mean, I could be
hit by a bus when I walk out of this building.
And are the things that I'm prideful about Are they going to survive?
Are they sustainable? Are they meaningful? Will it have mattered that I
was in this world?
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adrienne maree brown
I do think that we're all given various kinds of work to do in a
lifetime, and where there's great pain, that usually means there's great
healing that needs to happen, sometimes intergenerational, sometimes
ancestral. And if we can release ourselves from that sort of punitive
policing, slavery-era practice of judging each other and trying to
determine who belongs and who doesn't belong, then we can soften in and
see, we are all shaped by this structure, these societal structures that
are designed to keep someone else in power.
And it's one of the most liberating a-ha's you can have is, like, "I
don't have to participate in structures that are designed to give people
power over me. I can actually figure out with other people what does it
look like to create structures for ourselves and not judge ourselves for
needing care, not judge ourselves for needing medicine, not judge
ourselves for needing mediation, for needing therapy, for needing help,
for needing support?" During this pandemic, I've had a lot of people in
my life who needed support, like, financial support, to get through it.
And thank God that they were able to ask for it, which comes in part
because they're in a community of people who have relinquished judgment.
And they know it's like, "There's nothing wrong with you for not having
stored up a gazillion dollars to get through a global pandemic." We're
not better than each other, we're just positioned in different places
for different work.
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Tracy Dennis-Tiwary
So I think of pride as this fraught emotion, but one that has, if we can
bear to look at ourselves and really face what we're prideful about, to
be an emotion that has incredible potential for transformation.
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Raveena Aurora
Then there's another kind of pride. The one that comes when you do
things that you, or others, didn't think you could do. The big and small
accomplishments that happen every day, that deserve your pride. The type
of pride that is akin to rejoicing, a space of revelry and celebration
of the moment, not judgment of it.
Here is Nora Wood, the ten-year-old Daughter of Awaken's executive producer.
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Nora Wood
Pride is being proud of yourself. I mean, at least that's what I think
it is. It's when you feel that you've accomplished something and you
feel that you've done it the right way, like let's say you make a cake,
and most of the time your dad helps you with it, but this time you make
it as a surprise for his birthday. And at the end, you'll feel really
proud because you did it by yourself. I mean, I know I'm a child. I
mean, I'm ten. So it may seem to you adults like, "Uh, pfff, making a
cake, yeah. So easy."
But yeah, I'm mostly not allowed to use the stove or oven, so—
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adrienne maree brown
I see my niblings, my sister's kids and the children of my friends, and
that feeling of having accomplished something that they didn't know they
could do. Like, "I am standing up." That kind of pure, what I think of
as child pride, like, a little childlike pride. And then, I think of ego
pride. [Laugh] I think of the times in my life when I've been like, "Got
it. I've figured this all out, and everyone needs to listen to me."
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Nora Wood
I actually—I heard this story when I was like four, so I don't really
remember it, but I'm pretty sure it was like this—this man or—I just
call it this person—wanted to fly, and so they went and decided that
they were going to make wings out of wax and the wings start working.
But as he becomes farther away from Earth and feels more powerful and
like more than what he is, he starts flying higher and higher, closer to
the sun, and the wings melt, and he dies. [laughs] He falls and dies.
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Raveena Aurora
Stories about pride surface in many cultures. Like the Greek myth Icarus
describes, if you become too proud, you can get very hurt, and some part
of you can die. And Buddhism teaches that a delusionally proud person
will inevitably be brought to humility. Both warn that a relationship
with someone you love dearly can be challenged. For adrienne, this
happened after 9/11.
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adrienne maree brown
My father was in the Army for 30 years, all of my growing up years, so
we were a military household. And he was particularly the Chief of War
Plans at the time of 9/11, so he was working in the Pentagon. His office
was destroyed in the 9/11 attacks. He was away from the office, but I
thought he was gone most of the day of 9/11. And then, we came back
together, we were spending time together as a family, and over the
months that followed, we really split from each other even more
intensely politically than we ever had before. And that had been
happening as I'd been getting my political education about what is the
military, what is colonization, what is occupation, how does the
military function in the world?
I had a lot of critiques. [Laugh] And then, it all came to a huge head
where, for me, I looked at what happened during 9/11, and I thought, "We
need to try to understand what led to this result, how we could end up
with people feeling that they needed to take this kind of action. What
is our responsibility? How can we change the conditions so that
something like this can't happen again?" And my dad was working in the
Pentagon, and they were in a winding up for war in Afghanistan and Iraq.
And we ended up in a car together, screaming at each other, both of us,
that the other was a terrorist. And I ended up getting out of the car,
and we went for a long time without talking.
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Raveena Aurora
When it comes to a life-changing event that threatens our sense of
security, we may act in ways, at time prideful ways, to give ourselves
some sense of agency and safety. It can be an attempt in finding
stability when there doesn't seem to be any.
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Tracy Dennis-Tiwary
When we are in a prideful state, depending on how we view our sense of
self and our value, we do things to sustain, sometimes at any cost that
sense of being a valued self.
So for example, many of us believe that being a good person is a really
central part of being a valued self and the self that we should be in
the world. So people are motivated to do all sorts of things, sometimes
terrible things to sustain the belief that they are a good person. So if
someone tells you, "Hey, to save the world, you need to do this terrible
deed," but you're a good person, right? This is a righteous cause,
people will do all sorts of things that objectively are not what a good
person does to retain that integrity.
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adrienne maree brown
My mom said it wasn't quite the year that I remember it being, but it
was a long time before we were able to really communicate in a civil way
again and hear each other with love. And I think pride came in in a few
ways. I think there's the pride that had fallen away in the first place.
I grew up very proud of my dad, very proud of, like, who he was as a
person, and then we went through this transition where I started
understanding more about the military and really questioning everything
about his life and what he'd been willing to do or not do. And he had
felt very proud about his work, and his world view, and his community,
and I think was kind of devastated when I came home throwing all that
back at him. I think there was a period of, like, "You do need to
respect me. I made these choices for you, I made these choices for our
family."
But neither of us could see past our perspective in that moment. I
really felt like me singularly, alone, talking to my dad is how we're
going to stop this war. Like, "I have to do this. I have to stop it. I
have to say the right thing." And I felt like such a failure because I
wasn't saying the right thing, and I wasn't having the impact I wanted
to have.
And of course, now, I look back, and it's like, that's not how you stop
wars. [Laugh] I know so much about organizing as a communal and
collective act, but at that time, I really felt like, "There's an
individual opportunity here that I have to fulfill. There's a destiny
that I need to fulfill." And I was really frustrated with myself that I
couldn't pull it off.
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Raveena Aurora
When we look more closely, pride may be surfacing because we're feeling
frustrated and we're trying to somehow find a way to make ourselves feel
superior so we can avoid that frustration. But the counterpoint to pride
is equanimity, the ability to hold seeming contradictions together,
seeming differences. In reality, we are no better and no worse than
anyone else. And when we see ourselves as connected, our world expands
and we may have an even stronger impact.
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Dzogchen Ponlop Rinpoche
The wisdom nature of pride, or the essence of pride, is what we call the
wisdom of equanimity. The wisdom of equanimity is a one-taste experience
of wisdom. One-taste experience. Seeing that there is a sense of
sameness between you and the others. There's a sense of no separation,
so to speak. If you look at it from very simple, relative point of view,
there's a sense of no separation between you and others as being human,
for example. We are all human. We are all the same.
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adrienne maree brown
And I feel like I'm now bringing that lens to as many places as I can in
my life that I'm like, "I'm not a good person, I'm not a bad person. I
am a human. And as a human, I am trying to learn how to be in
relationship to other humans and in relationship to this planet. And I
won't do that as a perfect saint. I will still be a human the whole
time. And it's so relaxing, actually, to stop trying to be a saint, or
stop trying to be perfect, and instead live my life. And live a life in
which what I want to get good at is being in an accountable relationship
with other people in my life. what I want to get good at is being in an
accountable relationship with the planet. And that's actually doable in
my lifetime. I'm doing it. I'm learning. So I think that's the other
thing that happens, this equanimity allows us to actually be in the
world as it is,
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Raveena Aurora
That's what we're all going for, hopefully, to be able to hold opposing
views, to care for one another in the process and to do good in the
world. Buddhist teacher and author Sharon Salzberg has such a wonderful
way of illustrating this.
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Sharon Salzberg
The way they use the word "equanimity" reminds me of when I was
practicing loving kindness intensively in Burma, and I was working with
my Burmese teacher Sayadaw U Pandita, he would at times give us almost
like little pop quizzes,
One day, he said to me, "Let's say you're walking in the forest, and
it's you—" And in the formal work of loving kindness meditation, you
work with various categories of beings—those you're close to, those
you're not so close to. So he said, "You're walking in the forest. It's
you and your benefactor, someone who has really helped you. Your friend.
Your neutral person, like someone you hardly know and you don't really
have a view of, liking or disliking. Your difficult person, or an enemy.
And this bandit comes up to you and says, 'Someone amongst you has to
die.' And it's up to you to choose. Who are you going to choose?" So I
had been practicing very intensively for about six weeks at that point,
and had spent hours and hours and hours offering loving kindness to
every one of those categories, including myself.
And I closed my eyes, and I just realized, "I can't make a choice." Like
everyone seemed equal to me. So I said to him, "I can't choose." And he
said, "Not even your enemy?" And I tried again. I closed my eyes. And I
genuinely could not say, "You don't count" or "I don't care." So I said,
"No, I can't choose my enemy." So then he said, "Not even yourself?" And
I thought, "Uh oh, I'm gonna fail this quiz." [laughs] Because I just
couldn't find a place in which I didn't count. We just all seemed equal.
So I said, "No, I just can't do that." And he didn't say anything. And I
left, and I had this text in my—this ancient Buddhist text in my room,
and grabbed it right away as soon as I got back to my room and looked it
up, and sure enough, from like 2,000 years ago, there's the question,
"Say you're walking in the forest, and there are all these people. Who
can you choose?" And it turned out I had given the right answer.
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adrienne maree brown
We need to be scholars of belonging, right? Like, what does it actually
mean to belong to each other? The idea of being superior towards each
other has done a lot of damage to us and created a lot of ways in which
people are like, "Oh, this is my identity. It's better than yours." It's
like, there's no truth to it anywhere. So far, there's no scientific
basis of saying anyone's better than anyone else. But we try to create
these monolithic identity spaces and have that be the way we experience
belonging, and it doesn't work.
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Dzogchen Ponlop Rinpoche
There's a sense of sameness. There's a sense of one taste, because we
all experience suffering, and we all don't want suffering. We all want
to be free and liberated. And so there is a sense of a one taste here,
of experience. But ultimately speaking, the one-taste wisdom, wisdom of
equanimity, is seeing the reality, seeing the reality that all things in
its nature are equally lacking existence, equally do not exist. Śūnyatā;
we are talking about emptiness in Buddhism. And so wisdom of equanimity
is actually seeing that kind of śūnyatā or emptiness reality, in which
everything is equal.
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Raveena Aurora
Equanimity. This is the teaching that pride has to offer. This is what
it really comes down to, suspending judgment so that you can recognize
the ways we are all fundamentally equal and therefore more connected.
When we feel connected, we want to do good, to be kind to each other.
What would the world look like if we were consistently cognizant of the
fact that we are all inextricably connected by the virtue of us being
human, together, on this planet.
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adrienne maree brown
I was rewatching Scandal and just noticing how I'm like, "Oh, there's
this storyline of, like, how the more privilege you get, in some ways,
the more it shrinks your possibility of who you get to be and how you
get to be. And so, you have this pride of success that may or may not
have been tied to any labor that you've done, but then you have to
constantly be policing, and adapting, and compromising in order to
maintain that success. Meanwhile, there's folks who are outside of those
spaces and not particularly proud of anything, 0:31:02 And the saddest
people that I have met in my life are those who would be seen as having
the most privilege. I actually think a lot of what happens, particularly
with systems like white supremacy, is that that lack of belonging
becomes its own violent self-sustaining force. So you see these folks
who are like, "I want to be powerful. I want to maintain this privilege
at all costs," but then there's this deep loneliness, this deep
depression, and Imposter Syndrome that makes it really hard to enjoy
your privilege because there's some part of you that knows, "This isn't
real.
I want to belong as I am. I want to be loved as I am." Which is fair.
Which everyone deserves.
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Raveena Aurora
Pride, of course, isn't all bad and from an evolutionary perspective, it
has a reason for being. Tracy Dennis-Tiwary.
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Tracy Dennis-Tiwary
I mean, one thing too I want to say about, and this is a stance that I
feel is important to have in discussion as we look at the intersections
and also differences between psychology and spiritual traditions is to
an emotion scientist, every negative emotion or difficult emotion is a
double-edged sword. So there are costs to envy, pride, anxiety, but it
wouldn't have evolved with us if there weren't some potential advantage
to be had. And you know, people often say, "Oh, well, if it's
evolutionary theory, you just mean survival of the fittest." But it can
be more than that too.
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adrienne maree brown
I do think there's some sweet nature of pride, and then I think the one
where œit's sort of like, "Oh, I know everything," I'm not sure if
that's based in nature or if that's based in the competitive structures
of our current social systems, where it's like, "Knowing something is
how I establish my value in the world, so I better know something." And,
like, the faster you can get expert in something, the more guaranteed
your survival is these days. Nothing is just given to you for being
born, right? It's like, you either have to work for it, or you have to
have come into it. And we live in a really strange period right now
where there are a lot of people who are really proud without having any
skills behind it. [Laugh]
Everyone has judgment. Everyone judges all the time. And the invitation
for me and the practices is not to give up who I am, it's not to give up
noticing what I notice, but it's changing the importance I give to what
I notice, and it's calling myself in around the power dynamics of what
I'm noticing and how I'm noticing it. Non-judgment in interpersonal
dynamics softens my whole spine and my gut, that I'm like, "Oh, I don't
know better than this person about the decisions they need to make for
their own lives. I am not living in their body.
Their body is giving them data. I'm not living with the compromises
they've made. I don't know, and I don't control, and I don't have to
control any of that. But if I'm curious, I can learn with them as they
learn something about this experience of life that's different from what
I'm learning." And non-judgment gives me so much room to experience more
life. Like, I literally get to experience so much more life because
instead of sitting in judgment, for me, I go to curiosity. I love the
equanimity part because it's like, there's so much balance, there's so
much ease, there's another kind of pleasure that comes from it, but
fundamentally, I really feel that curiosity is at the heart of it all.
And I'm like, "Oh, well, why did you do that? Huh. Like, how did you
reach that conclusion?" And I'll say it's easier to have some
curiosities than others…
Curiosity creates possibility.
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Ruth Ozeki
When we're curious about things. And that's what a pilgrimage is. It's a
journey that you take because you're curious. It's an inquiry. And that
is, I think, really where the intimacy comes from. It comes from this
suspension of not knowing, an openness to answers or to more questions,
this kind of openness to the world.
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Raveena Aurora
Curiosity creates possibility. Author, filmmaker, and Zen priest Ruth Ozeki.
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Ruth Ozeki
Certainty really is a kind of wall or barrier that protects us from that
kind of intimacy. It prevents that kind of intimacy, and it also
prevents the exposure to anything new. It's kind of almost a reification
of a sense of self, and it creates this distance between yourself and
another person. It deflects, in other words. It doesn't welcome, but it
deflects. Anybody who's been explained at, we all understand that. I
think that's why Rebecca Solnit came up with that word, mansplaining.
And this is something that my husband and I do to each other all the
time, we're constantly mansplaining to each other. And one day, we tried
an experiment. We tried this experiment whereby any time we felt
compelled to make a statement or to explain something to each other, we
turned it into a question instead.
And it was a remarkable exercise because I felt this physical sensation
in my gut, in my heart, of being welcomed into conversation rather than
deflected. It's a wonderful thought experiment, and I totally recommend it.
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Raveena Aurora
There are all kinds of ways to experiment with relinquishing judgment.
The Mandala Lab at the Rubin Museum does this beautifully.
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Tracy Dennis-Tiwary
One way the Mandala Lab is important is that it really, surpassingly
well, helps us take this first step of engaging with our emotions
without shame and judgment.
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Raveena Aurora
Imagine that you are holding a token in your hands, like a poker chip,
and you are looking in a mirror. There are four long tubes in front of
you, each with a slot at the top. You have a choice to make.
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Tracy Dennis-Tiwary
So, with the part of the installation where you have to note what you're
prideful about and you can put your tokens in the appropriate bin, it's
just you just have to look at it. You just have to decide.
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Raveena Aurora
1. I think I am better than others
2. I feel proud of achievements I haven't earned
3. I think I am worse than others
or
4. I feel proud of qualities that may cause harm to others
[the sound of a token falling and clinking]
Which do you choose?
You have to engage, and just even for that moment, come face to face
with it …and with yourself.
You might cringe at your choice, but at least you're not alone.
[the sound of another token falling and clinking against others this time]
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Tracy Dennis-Tiwary
And you can see that you're not alone, right? So, these contributions is
we're a part of the art.
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Raveena Aurora
It can be difficult to acknowledge your pride in such an open, public
way but it can also be transformative.
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Tracy Dennis-Tiwary
We are in community around these difficult emotions.
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adrienne maree brown
I think one of the biggest things that happens is, we are able to
relinquish the idea that some of us are good and deserving of good
things, and some of us are bad and deserving of bad things. And I feel
like when we let that go, and we recognize that all of us do good and
bad things, all of us have innocence, all of us have harmful
behaviors,and I think once we recognize we all have those
contradictions, then we can begin to get curious with each other.
"What is our way forward together?" We actually stop looking at each
other to find out what is bad and wrong in the other and instead are
able to look at each other with eyes of love and curiosity. "What needs
healing here? What needs attention here?
"What is our way forward together?"
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Raveena Aurora
Thank you for listening to Season 2 of Awaken, a podcast from The Rubin
Museum that explores the dynamic path to enlightenment and what it means
to "wake up." I'm singer and songwriter Raveena Aurora.
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You just heard author and activist adrienne maree brown, Buddhist
teacher and scholar Dzogchen Ponlop Rinpoche, psychologist and
neuroscientist Tracy Dennis-Tiwary, author and Buddhist teacher Sharon
Salzberg, author and Zen priest Ruth Ozeki and ten-year-old Nora Wood.
Awaken is produced by the Rubin Museum of Art in collaboration with
SOUND MADE PUBLIC.
The music has been produced by Alexis Cuadrado and Hannis Brown. With
some additional tracks from Blue Dot Sessions.
You can continue the conversation by following us on Instagram at
@rubinmuseum . And if you're
enjoying this podcast, leave us a review wherever you listen to
podcasts, and tell your friends about the conversation you just heard.
This is episode 2 of a 7 part series inspired by the Mandala Lab at the
Rubin Museum—an immersive space for social, emotional, and ethical
learning. Come explore the Lab in New York City, or in one of the
installations that is traveling the world. Visitrubinmuseum.org
to learn more about the Museum and about the
art, cultures, and ideas of Himalayan regions. We look forward to seeing
you soon.