Cultivating genuine openness and beginner's mind as a core therapeutic stance that allows fresh seeing and authentic learning.
Nasreddin Hodja's famous naiveté—his questions that seem absurdly simple, his refusal to make obvious assumptions—is often deliberate wisdom. He asks the question a child would ask because that question opens the possibility that everyone's assumptions are wrong. This framework transforms the therapeutic stance in play therapy: the therapist genuinely doesn't know what the child will do, what the play means, or where it leads. This is not ignorance but openness. Deliberate naiveté means asking 'why?' when everyone else accepts the obvious, playing along fully with a child's logic even when it seems illogical, and treating each session as genuinely new rather than interpreting it through previous narratives. This stance conveys deep respect and keeps the therapeutic relationship alive rather than dead beneath accumulated interpretations. It models for clients the possibility that not-knowing is not weakness but spaciousness from which wisdom emerges.
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