Nasreddin's perpetual freshness of perspective shows how joy emerges when we release expertise and meet each moment anew.
Nasreddin approaches every situation as if encountering it for the first time, even when repeating familiar errors. This isn't forgetfulness but a deliberate practice of beginner's mind. He demonstrates that the rigidity of accumulated 'knowledge' often blocks both wisdom and joy. When we insist we already understand something, we stop seeing it. The examined life requires returning to naïveté—asking basic questions, noticing what we've stopped noticing, approaching routine with curiosity. Nasreddin's tales reveal that joy often hides in the familiar because we've stopped looking. By adopting beginner's mind intentionally, we recover wonder. We see our spouse, our work, our daily walk as if fresh. This practice connects directly to joy because joy requires presence and surprise. The examined life means regularly shedding the armor of expertise to feel vulnerable and alive. Nasreddin shows that the wisest path is often one that circles back to innocent questioning, where each moment becomes genuinely new.
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