Asking what Hodja would ask at dawn and dusk—not to find answers, but to transcend the need for certainty through humorous surrender.
Nasreddin Hodja's method was rarely to provide answers but to pose questions that unraveled the questioner's assumptions. At sunrise, we might ask: 'What am I trying to control today that is not mine to control?' At sunset: 'What did I resist that wanted to teach me?' These are not questions seeking logical answers. Rather, they are like Hodja's koans—they dissolve the questioner's fixed stance. The practice creates space between stimulus and response. Instead of frantically solving life's problems, we learn to hold them lightly, like the Hodja holding his contradiction-soaked stories. This questioning practice, repeated daily at natural threshold moments, gradually rewires our nervous system away from the constant buzz of problem-solving toward receptive presence. The questions don't need answering; they need asking. They soften the demand for certainty that keeps us in perpetual anxiety. We become more like Hodja: wise not because we have answers, but because we laugh at the questions.
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