Positioning oneself as perpetual learner and questioner rather than authority, making not-knowing a stable stance.
Nasreddin never resolves into wisdom-master; he remains perpetually confused, forever asking questions that land sideways. This incompleteness is his strength, not his limitation. Stand-up comedy practiced as examined life requires similar positioning: the comedian becomes forever-student, always noticing what doesn't make sense, always interrogating fresh material. This contrasts with false expertise—the authority figure who has all answers. The examined joyful life, practiced through comedy, befriends incompleteness as permanent condition rather than temporary state to transcend. A comedian's growth comes from deepening questions, not from arriving at final answers. The discipline involves radical honesty about not-knowing, curiosity that never settles, and willingness to appear foolish. This framework liberates audiences similarly: you don't need to have figured it out. Not-knowing becomes respectable, even wise. The examined life becomes sustainable practice rather than project requiring completion.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.