Questioning what everyone assumes to be true, testing received wisdom through direct experience and observation.
Nasreddin constantly tests consensus reality—what everyone knows to be true but nobody has actually verified. He tries things that shouldn't work, asks questions that shouldn't be asked, observes what actually happens rather than accepting received explanations. This becomes a practice for the examined natural life because much of our suffering stems from operating according to unexamined assumptions: about how relationships must work, what success means, how our bodies function, what's possible for us. Nasreddin's tradition invites gently questioning these givens. Not in a paranoid or nihilistic way, but through patient observation: is this actually true in my experience, or am I accepting someone else's conclusion? The practice might look like noticing whether social anxiety actually prevents bad outcomes or mostly prevents living, whether the schedule everyone follows actually serves you, whether the ambitions you're pursuing are genuinely yours. Consensus reality often contains valuable wisdom, but sometimes it contains inherited confusion. The examined life requires occasionally stepping outside the consensus to see clearly.
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