EveryEvent ATX

Sfoglia tutti i Events

Live Music Capital of the World

events

Concerts & Live Music
Festivals
Sports & Recreation
Food & Drink
Arts & Culture
Community
Family & Kids
Nightlife
Comedy
Theater
Destinazioni popolari
BaliSedonaLos AngelesCosta RicaNew YorkSan FranciscoAustinMiamiJoshua TreeTulum
Vedi tutte le categorieVedi tutte le destinazioni

Esplora tutte le funzionalità

Strumenti potenti per far crescere i tuoi eventi

Funzionalità della piattaforma

Prezzi dinamici intelligenti
Categorie di biglietti
Posti assegnati
Recupero carrelli abbandonati
Recupero visitatori
Donazioni e prezzi variabili
Sistema affiliati
Scanner biglietti
Codici sconto
Domande personalizzate
Condivisione biglietti
Upsell e componenti aggiuntivi
Analisi e report
Sequenze email
Lista d'attesa / Notifica / Promemoria
Esplora
Discovery HubArtists & PerformersVenuesKnowledge Base
Vedi tutte le funzionalitàChi siamo
PrezziBlog
Sfoglia tutti gli eventi

events

Concerts & Live MusicFestivalsSports & RecreationFood & DrinkArts & CultureCommunityFamily & KidsNightlife

Destinazioni popolari

BaliSedonaLos AngelesCosta RicaNew YorkSan Francisco

Esplora

Discovery HubArtists & PerformersVenuesKnowledge Base

Funzionalità della piattaforma

Prezzi dinamici intelligentiCategorie di bigliettiPosti assegnatiRecupero carrelli abbandonatiRecupero visitatoriDonazioni e prezzi variabiliSistema affiliatiScanner bigliettiCodici scontoDomande personalizzateCondivisione bigliettiUpsell e componenti aggiuntiviAnalisi e reportSequenze emailLista d'attesa / Notifica / Promemoria
Vedi tutte le funzionalitàChi siamo
PrezziBlog
AccediRegistratiOrganizzatori di eventi
  • Browse All Events
  • Concerts & Live Music
  • Festivals
  • Sports & Recreation
  • Food & Drink
  • Arts & Culture
  • Community
  • Family & Kids
  • Nightlife
  • Tutte le categorie →
  • San Antonio
  • Hill Country
  • Fredericksburg
  • Houston
  • Dallas
  • All Destinations →
  • For Promoters
  • For Artists
  • For Venues
  • For Festivals
  • For Event Spaces
  • For Nonprofits
  • For Bloggers
  • For Speakers
  • Brand Ambassador
  • Case Studies
  • Rete di 350K+ acquirenti
  • Recupero carrelli abbandonati
  • Prezzi dinamici intelligenti
  • Categorie di biglietti
  • Eventi ricorrenti
  • Posti assegnati
  • Sistema affiliati
  • Lista d'attesa / Notifica
  • Scanner biglietti
  • Widget incorporabile
  • Event Syndication
  • Message Center
  • Integrations
  • Reports
  • Tutte le funzionalità →
  • Chi siamo
  • The Ecosystem
  • Blog
  • Glossario
  • Inspiration
  • Centro assistenza
  • Contatti
  • Documentazione API
  • Risorse del brand
  • Carriere
  • Stampa
  • Termini di servizio
  • Informativa sulla privacy

Events

  • Browse All Events
  • Concerts & Live Music
  • Festivals
  • Sports & Recreation
  • Food & Drink
  • Arts & Culture
  • Community
  • Family & Kids
  • Nightlife
  • Tutte le categorie →

Getaways

  • San Antonio
  • Hill Country
  • Fredericksburg
  • Houston
  • Dallas
  • All Destinations →

For Organizers

  • For Promoters
  • For Artists
  • For Venues
  • For Festivals
  • For Event Spaces
  • For Nonprofits
  • For Bloggers
  • For Speakers
  • Brand Ambassador
  • Case Studies

Funzionalità

  • Rete di 350K+ acquirenti
  • Recupero carrelli abbandonati
  • Prezzi dinamici intelligenti
  • Categorie di biglietti
  • Eventi ricorrenti
  • Posti assegnati
  • Sistema affiliati
  • Lista d'attesa / Notifica
  • Scanner biglietti
  • Widget incorporabile
  • Event Syndication
  • Message Center
  • Integrations
  • Reports
  • Tutte le funzionalità →

Azienda

  • Chi siamo
  • The Ecosystem
  • Blog
  • Glossario
  • Inspiration
  • Centro assistenza
  • Contatti
  • Documentazione API
  • Risorse del brand
  • Carriere
  • Stampa
  • Termini di servizio
  • Informativa sulla privacy
EveryEvent
© 2026 EveryEvent Austin. Tutti i diritti riservati.
Inspiration

Becoming Your Own BodhiTree: Buddhist Root Practice

Be Here Now Network
Be Here Now Network
Oct 24, 2025
6 min read

TLDR: Jack Kornfield offers a guided meditation practice centered on the symbolism of the Bodhi Tree, the sacred fig tree beneath which Buddha attained enlightenment. Rather than treating the Bodhi Tree as distant mythology, Kornfield invites practitioners to embody its qualities—rootedness, stability, interconnection—in their own bodies and awareness. The meditation uses the tree as both literal visualization and metaphor for awakening: developing deep roots in present-moment awareness while growing outward in compassion and wisdom. This practice bridges Buddhist symbolism with contemporary meditation, making ancient wisdom accessible through embodied experience.

Read · 6 sections

Why the Bodhi Tree Matters in Buddhist Teaching

The Bodhi Tree holds extraordinary significance in Buddhism not as mere legend but as a living symbol of the path to awakening. As Kornfield notes in the meditation, "The Buddha was born under a tree, grew up under the trees, practiced under trees, got enlightened under The Bodhi Tree, taught under the trees, and died beneath two sal trees that immediately came into bloom when he died. He and the trees were one."

This isn't poetic flourish—it reflects a profound truth about Buddhism's relationship with nature and embodied practice. The Buddha's entire spiritual journey unfolded beneath and among trees. The Bodhi Tree specifically marks the moment of complete awakening (bodhi), the culmination of years of meditation and inquiry. In Buddhist iconography and teaching, the tree represents stability grounded in earth while reaching toward sky—a perfect image for the meditative mind balancing groundedness with expansiveness.

Kornfield's approach transforms this symbolism from abstract history into living practice. Rather than contemplating the Bodhi Tree as something that existed 2,500 years ago in India, the meditation asks: what would it mean to become your own Bodhi Tree? How can the qualities the tree embodies—patience, rootedness, nourishment of life, stillness amid change—become active in your own being?

The Practice of Embodied Rootedness

At the heart of this meditation lies the cultivation of roots. Just as a tree's invisible root system anchors it to earth and draws up nourishment, the practice asks practitioners to develop roots in present-moment awareness. This isn't abstract spaciness but concrete, grounded attention.

In Buddhist meditation, particularly in the Theravada traditions Kornfield trained in under teachers like Ven. Ajahn Chah and Ven. Mahasi Sayadaw, rootedness means:

  • Stabilized attention: A mind that doesn't scatter constantly between past regrets and future anxieties but settles into what is actually happening now
  • Physical presence: Awareness of the body as earth—breath, heartbeat, weight, sensation—rather than living only in conceptual mind
  • Ethical grounding: Values and integrity that hold you steady regardless of external circumstances
  • Connection to source: Recognition that, like a tree drawing water and minerals from soil, awareness draws sustenance from reality itself

The meditation likely guides attention to the base of the spine, the feet, the sitting bones—the literal contact points with earth. From there, practitioners can extend awareness upward while maintaining this root connection. This mirrors the tree's paradox: to reach highest, the roots must go deepest.

Growing Outward in Compassion and Interconnection

A tree is not an isolated entity. It is fundamentally connected—drawing from soil, releasing oxygen, hosting insects and birds, communicating through mycorrhizal networks with other trees. The Bodhi Tree, under which countless beings found refuge and teaching, exemplifies this web of life.

The practice of becoming your own Bodhi Tree thus extends beyond personal meditation into relational awakening. Kornfield's teaching throughout his career has emphasized that mindfulness and awakening naturally lead to compassion and service. The tree doesn't choose to provide oxygen or shelter; these flow from its nature. Similarly, as practitioners stabilize in present-moment awareness (roots), they naturally become available to others (branches and leaves).

The meditation may invite visualization of the crown of the tree—branches spreading, leaves unfurling, reaching toward sun. This can represent the expansion of heart and mind in compassion, loving-kindness (metta), and equanimous awareness. The Bodhi Tree had no special relationship with any particular being; it provided shelter and presence to all who came. It asks nothing yet gives everything.

Stillness as the Gateway to Awakening

One of the most counterintuitive aspects of this practice is that deep change comes not from doing but from being still. The Bodhi Tree under which Buddha awakened is famous precisely because nothing special happened to it—the Buddha sat. He was present. He investigated suffering and the end of suffering through unmoving meditation.

Kornfield's meditation emphasizes this paradox: awakening arrives through stillness, not striving. The tree does not "try" to grow; it grows through conditions of rootedness, sunlight, and time. Similarly, the meditator doesn't force awakening but creates conditions—stability, presence, patience—in which the natural wisdom of the mind can manifest.

This addresses a common misconception about meditation: that it requires special experiences, visions, or extraordinary states. Instead, Kornfield's approach invites practitioners to notice what is already here—the breath, the body, the quiet availability of this moment. The Bodhi Tree achieved its significance not through being extraordinary but through being fully itself, fully present.

From Symbol to Direct Experience

Kornfield holds a unique position as a teacher who bridges East and West, monastic and lay life. Having trained as a Buddhist monk in Thailand, India, and Burma since the 1970s and then returned to teach in America, he understands both the power of traditional symbolism and the contemporary need for practices that feel real and accessible.

The meditation on becoming your own Bodhi Tree operates on multiple levels simultaneously. On one level, it is practical—you are sitting upright, spine tall like a tree trunk, developing concentration and calm. On another level, it is symbolic—you are claiming the Buddha's awakening as not distant mythology but your own possibility. On still another level, it is relational—you are recognizing yourself as part of the vast web of life that the Bodhi Tree exemplifies.

This is what distinguishes Kornfield's teaching: he doesn't ask practitioners to believe in symbols. He invites them to investigate directly. Sit like a tree. Be still like a tree. Notice what becomes available. The Bodhi Tree did nothing special to become enlightened ground—it was simply fully itself. What happens when you do the same?

Where to Go From Here

This meditation serves as an entry point into several deeper practices and understandings. For practitioners new to meditation, the tree as anchor provides a vivid, embodied focus that can be more accessible than counting breaths or observing thoughts. For experienced meditators, it offers a rich symbolic framework for understanding the integration of stability and openness.

Kornfield offers a full suite of online courses and teachings exploring these dimensions further, including Mindfulness Meditation Fundamentals, Walking the Eightfold Path, and Opening the Heart of Forgiveness—all of which build on the foundation of rootedness and awakening introduced here. His monthly groups and courses at JackKornfield.com provide ongoing community and guidance for practitioners seeking to deepen their practice.

The invitation of this meditation is simple and radical: you already contain everything needed for awakening. Like the Bodhi Tree, you need only be fully present to the conditions of your own life—rooted, steady, open, and alive to this moment.

Be Here Now Network
AuthorBe Here Now Network

Be Here Now Network is the creator of Heart Wisdom with Jack Kornfield, a podcast exploring consciousness, spirituality, and personal transformation. With 313 episodes, they have c…

View profileWebsite
Explore Topics
Bodhi-treeBuddhist-meditationRooted-presenceMindfulnessJack-kornfield

Got Questions?

Frequently Asked Questions

The Bodhi Tree symbolizes awakening and the conditions for enlightenment—rootedness, stability, and interconnection with all life. In Jack Kornfield's teaching, it represents both the historical tree under which Buddha gained enlightenment and a metaphor for the qualities practitioners cultivate through meditation: deep presence grounded in the body and mind, expanding compassion and wisdom, and stillness as the gateway to insight.
The meditation invites you to sit upright with your spine straight like a tree trunk, establish awareness of your roots (feet, sitting bones, base of spine) touching the earth, then gradually expand awareness upward and outward while maintaining that grounding. It combines physical posture, breath awareness, and visualization of branching and growth, connecting literal bodily experience with the symbolic qualities of stability and awakening.
While rooted in Buddhist tradition and taught by a Buddhist teacher, the meditation is accessible to people of any background or belief system. Kornfield emphasizes direct experience over belief; the practice invites you to notice what actually happens when you sit still, ground yourself, and remain present—universal human capacities that don't require religious faith.
This reflects both a biographical reality—the Buddha was born, practiced, and died among trees—and a deeper spiritual truth that the Buddha (and awakened beings generally) experience no separation between self and nature. It suggests that complete awakening includes recognizing oneself as inseparable from the living world, echoing the ecological and relational wisdom expressed through the tree metaphor.
Rootedness means developing stable, grounded awareness in the present moment rather than being scattered by thoughts about past and future. In the Bodhi Tree meditation, it involves anchoring attention in the body, breath, and physical sensations—the literal ground beneath you—while remaining alert and awake. Deep roots allow the branches (thoughts, emotions, actions) to flourish without being blown over.
Yes. While the upright posture mirrors the tree, what matters most is the quality of attention and the intention to be present. You can practice lying down, in a chair, or in whatever position supports your body while allowing you to be awake and aware. The Bodhi Tree roots itself in whatever ground is available; so can your practice.
The Bodhi Tree serves all beings without choosing or effort—it provides shelter, oxygen, and stability simply by being itself. As you ground yourself in present-moment awareness (roots) and expand in awakeness (branches), compassion naturally unfolds as an expression of your true nature, not as something you have to force or achieve separately.

Continue Reading

More from Be

View All
Meditation Practice and the Nature of Awareness
Featured

Meditation Practice and the Nature of Awareness

Exploring meditation not as technique but as inquiry into consciousness itself, revealing how observation transforms our relationship with t…

1 min read
Love People As They Are: Responsive vs. Reactive
Featured

Love People As They Are: Responsive vs. Reactive

Learn how to love people unconditionally by shifting from reactive patterns to responsive presence, keeping your heart open in the face of s…

1 min read
Freedom Without Connection: Why Liberation Feels Empty
Featured

Freedom Without Connection: Why Liberation Feels Empty

External freedom without spiritual connection leaves the heart hollow. Explore why liberation requires more than just the absence of constra…

1 min read
Aghori Rituals Explained: Tantric Practices & Spiritual Tradition
Featured

Aghori Rituals Explained: Tantric Practices & Spiritual Tradition

Dr. Svoboda discusses Aghori rituals and their role in tantric spiritual practice. Learn about unconventional methods used in this ancient H…

1 min read

Keep exploring

Continue your journey

More wisdom and gatherings from across the BrightStar directory.

More Articles

Browse the full library of teachings, interviews, and guides.

Back to all articles →

Teachers & Artists

Explore the lineages, musicians, and guides of the conscious world.

Explore artists →

Find an Event

Kirtan, retreats, sound baths, breathwork, festivals — happening soon.

Browse events →
Read more from BrightStarCreate Free Account
Host your own gatherings?Try the Demo