A framework for recognizing which traditions serve practical purposes and which have become elaborate structures with no functional destination.
One of Nasreddin Hodja's tales describes him building an elaborate bridge that ends in the middle of water, serving no one. This image powerfully illuminates tradition-as-performance versus tradition-as-function. Many lunar customs have evolved into beautiful but purposeless rituals—actions performed because 'we've always done them,' not because they generate meaning or transformation. This concept asks the examined question: does this tradition bridge us to something real? For The moon and its traditions, it becomes crucial to distinguish between reverent preservation of meaningful practice and slavish repetition of empty form. The Hodja's wisdom here isn't cynical; rather, it's liberating. By identifying bridges that lead nowhere, we free energy for practices that genuinely serve our joyful awakening. This creates permission to modify, abandon, or radically reimagine traditions—not from disrespect, but from deep integrity and love for what actually nourishes human flourishing.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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