Recognizing that inexperience and fresh perspectives sometimes access strategic truth that expertise, locked in habit, misses.
Hodja often played the innocent fool, asking simple questions that revealed the expert's blind spots. In games, experienced players develop pattern recognition but also rigid mental ruts. A beginner, unburdened by 'correct' play, sometimes finds moves that break the expert's assumptions. The Beginner's Deeper Mind celebrates this paradox. A child's creative move in chess, an amateur's unconventional poker play, a newcomer's innovative board game strategy—these often work precisely because they violate learned conventions. Rather than dismissing this as luck, this concept examines it as access to truth through innocence. The examined joyful life doesn't cling to expertise but remains open to wisdom from unexpected sources. This teaches humility: mastery includes willingness to learn from the inexperienced. In practical terms, it encourages experienced players to periodically question foundational assumptions, to re-examine 'obvious' moves, and to remain playfully open. The game you know deeply can still surprise you if you approach it with beginner's mind.
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