Receiving each sunrise and sunset as unearned gift rather than entitlement, cultivating the psychological posture of the Hodja's often-poor protagonist.
Many Nasreddin Hodja tales feature him in states of want and need, yet responding with wit and grace. The Beggar's Gratitude is the deliberate cultivation of radical receptivity toward dawn and dusk. You approach these transitions not as rights guaranteed by physics but as gifts bestowed despite your unworthiness. This is not self-degradation but the liberation of non-expectation. When you greet sunrise with beggar's eyes—astonished, grateful, asking nothing—the morning becomes a feast. When you bid sunset farewell with a pauper's grace, you release the day's claims on you. This posture dissolves resentment, entitlement, and the exhausting burden of believing you deserve specific outcomes. The Hodja knew that poverty of expectation creates wealth of experience. By practicing Beggar's Gratitude, you train yourself to receive life as pure gift, transforming psychological desperation into spiritual openness. Each threshold becomes an unearned miracle rather than a scheduled appointment.
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.