Nasreddin's willingness to start again—to learn, fail, and restart—mirrors forest ecology where renewal and replanting are constants, not failures.
Nasreddin's character frequently begins anew, undaunted by previous failures or reversals. Forests embody this principle at scale: ancient forests fall; new growth rises. Replanting is not remediation of failure but part of the forest's true nature. For those examining both ancient and new forests, this teaches a crucial practice: the beginner's mind is not a lack of wisdom but its essence. When we approach a newly planted forest with the same wonder as an ancient one, we escape the trap of nostalgia that often diminishes new growth. The examined joyful life embraces replanting—literal or metaphorical—as an opportunity rather than a loss. This stance frees us from both the melancholy of decline and the arrogance of expertise, opening instead to what each stage of the forest's life cycle actually offers.
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