Brandon Locher is a multimedia versifier and music producer who currently lives and works in New York, NY. Since 2006, he’s had increasingly than 60 releases under various names and originative media, including audio recordings, visual art, multimedia art, and sound art. He’s been practicing the Transcendental Meditation technique for the past two years. Here’s what we learned well-nigh his creative work and how his TM practice enriches his life.

What are your passions? What does a typical day in your week squint like?

One of my biggest passions in life is simply process. I am often reminded of a passage from “Confessions of a Mountain Climber” by the versifier Agnes Denes. “I am a mountain climber, and there is no way out but up. Not for the peak–I have long since understood well-nigh that–but for the mountain. You create the mountain, and then you climb it. Not for the final peak; the rencontre is the process and the journey, and the unattainable answers are the lure.”

This statement has unchangingly resonated with me considering I finger process is veritably essential to everything in life. I’ve discovered I enjoy the fruitful results increasingly profoundly when I take time enjoying the process and journey to completion. Process is well-nigh the here and now and waking up to this very moment.

I’ve been playing piano, reading books, and watching films for entertainment lately. Generally, I’m working on music or artwork in my studio for at least 6-8 hours a day. I’ve found it very helpful and salubrious to structure my day but to indulge tons of variety within all of the variegated components. Day-to-day I’ll be making radically variegated music, eating variegated foods, and experiencing inspiration and eyeful in unknown places.

Do you see yourself as somebody who took a leap of faith to live a increasingly creative life or do you think it kind of just happened?

Brandon Locher

I’ve unchangingly been interested in self-education, basically gaining increasingly knowledge that can be recycled when into my creative practices and day-to-day life. Creativity, intelligence, and kicks are essential elements to live a fulfilled life, and I finger it’s my natural stuff to evolve towards a increasingly creative life.

Reading Maharishi’s words, “Expansion of happiness is the purpose of life, and incubation is the process through which it is fulfilled,” made me understand why my mind unchangingly seemed naturally attracted to gaining knowledge and ultimately achieving my full potential. It’s unfluctuating with the laws of nature. Creativity, to me, is pure fulfillment and happiness. My fine feeling lies in the act of stuff – bringing together values of the wool into relative existence with my expressions of music and art.

My drawings are created out of an appreciation, admiration, and love for the natural environment and universe. I profoundly enjoy thinking well-nigh macrocosm and microcosm and seeing the same patterns reproduced in all levels of the cosmos, from the largest all the way lanugo to the smallest scale. I believe, in this system, the midpoint is Man, who helps summarize the mystery of the cosmos. Drawing helps me establish peace and harmony within myself and ultimately with my surroundings and environment, too.

How does your environment play into your life?

I finger a very strong sensitivity to my environment, and I am unchangingly trying to help hoist my own surroundings. I am a total homebody and finger completely content staying at home. Therefore, I must create an environment and surroundings that help service and support my creative intentions and desires.

Hearing Maharishi say, “The universe influences the individual and the individual influences the universe,” helps me understand why I have unchangingly felt a connection to the environment at large. I am one to ritualize not only my domestic life but moreover my creative practices as well, and often those are one and the same to me. My studio has unchangingly been in my home, and, in a sense, I am creating artwork and music for my home. I am continuously cultivating my space so it’s inspiring and constantly feels fresh. It can be as simple as having fresh cut flowers that help hoist my unstipulated awareness. I love to curate my space as a ritual for creating, and creating is moreover a part of that same ritual.

What are your three favorite “tools” for a healthy and happy life?

The fast tempo of life does not indulge a real moment of silence. Therefore, I’ve found the Transcendental Meditation technique to be the most constructive way to pause and reset myself. Reading books provides me so much knowledge and inspiration. The most grounding thing is eating well. I’ve been a vegetarian since 2000, and for many years I basically ate “vegetarian junk food.” It now feels towardly to eat all organic and healthy, home-cooked food. I moreover really enjoy growing and juicing wheatgrass; it’s a unconfined way to start the day!

How long have you been practicing the Transcendental Meditation technique, and what inspired you to learn?

I’ve been practicing Transcendental Meditation for two years, although I’ve been surprisingly interested in Transcendental Meditation since 2011, when I read Catching the Big Fish: Meditation, Consciousness, and Creativity by David Lynch. I unchangingly knew well-nigh Maharishi Mahesh Yogi from The Beatles and other pop-culture knowledge, but when I read David Lynch’s book, I thought to myself, “Wow! Now this sounds like something for me!”

Fast forward nine years, and I spoke with Bob Roth, who casually mentioned how easy it was to sign up and learn the Transcendental Meditation technique. The next day I attended a quick introduction and started meditating that same weekend!

My sister has been practicing TM since 2012, and the positive effects her meditation practice has played on all aspects of her life are inspiring and vibrantly present, and seeing these results directly was a big influence for me to finally learn as well.

What was your perception of meditation in unstipulated surpassing you learned TM? Did that perception transpiration without your first few experiences meditating?

Prior to learning Transcendental Meditation, my perception of meditation was that it involved some type of intellectual play. I thought meditation was mentally challenging or a slightly difficult task for the mind, but this was completely wrong thinking considering I quickly discovered that Transcendental Meditation is an innocent, simple, and very easy technique.