Understanding solitude in nature as a way to make peace with untamed, irrational, and wild aspects of ourselves.
The Hodja accepted his own foolishness, confusion, and unpredictability with surprising grace, seeing these as fundamental rather than tragic. Solitude in nature offers opportunity to befriend the wilderness within—the impulses we usually suppress, the emotions we manage, the desires we control. Away from social performance, without audience or expectation, the wilderness of our own being emerges. The Hodja tradition suggests not fighting this wilderness but making friends with it, understanding that the untamed aspects of ourselves contain creativity, authenticity, and vigor. When alone in nature, old patterns surface: irrationality, contradictory impulses, seemingly inappropriate feelings. Rather than discipline these away, this concept invites recognition and integration. The examined life requires honesty about our own wildness, our animal nature, our departure from rational consistency. Natural solitude—amid actual wilderness—provides both permission and mirror for this work. By observing nature's apparent chaos and recognizing its inherent order, we begin to trust that our own complexity and contradiction might similarly contain hidden coherence. Befriending the wilderness within transforms solitude from escape into genuine self-knowledge and integration.
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