Recognition that obstacles, slowness, and apparent stupidity in nature are often wisdom in disguise, teaching patience and acceptance of what is.
The donkey appears repeatedly in Nasreddin tales as a figure of apparent foolishness who paradoxically teaches the deepest lessons. This reflects a natural wisdom: the donkey doesn't rush, doesn't force, doesn't pretend to understand what it cannot. Applying this to the examined natural life means recognizing that resistance, limitations, and slowness in our circumstances are not failures but invitations to deeper understanding. Nature itself moves at the donkey's pace—seasons cannot be hurried, seeds require darkness, growth demands time. When we resist this natural rhythm, we suffer. The Hodja teaches us to befriend our own 'donkey'—the stubborn, slow, earthy parts of ourselves and our situations. This reframes struggle as alignment, impatience as ignorance, and acceptance as the gateway to genuine joy. The examined natural life requires befriending obstacles rather than forever battling them.
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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