Pet behavior that seems illogical often contains hidden wisdom when examined through Hodja's lens of purposeful absurdity.
Why does your cat knock things off tables? Why does your dog chase its tail? Nasreddin Hodja would recognize in these seemingly pointless behaviors a profound teaching method. Just as his stories often appear ridiculous on first hearing—carrying moonlight in a bucket, seeking lost keys under the lamp—animal behavior invites us to look deeper. The examined joyful life requires developing comfort with apparent nonsense. When you stop insisting that everything be rational and useful, you open to the possibility that behavior serving no external purpose might serve something essential internally. Your pet's 'pointless' antics may be play, exploration, or simply the expression of authentic aliveness. By accepting this absurdity without constantly trying to correct or explain it, you practice tolerance for mystery. Hodja taught that wisdom often hides behind apparent foolishness. Watch your companion animal's inexplicable behaviors long enough and you may realize they contain their own strange logic—the logic of being fully alive rather than efficiently productive. This teaches the mind to relax its demand for constant justification.
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