Recognition that profound learning emerges from humble, overlooked, or seemingly foolish sources when we examine life with open attention.
In Nasreddin's tales, the donkey—stubborn, slow, unintelligent by conventional standards—becomes the vehicle of insight. This concept reorients how we perceive teachers and sources of wisdom in the examined natural life. The donkey represents all those aspects of existence we dismiss as foolish or beneath us: the body's simple needs, failure, repetition, slowness, appetite, stubbornness. Nasreddin's genius lies in demonstrating that natural wisdom often arrives through what we've devalued. The examined life, pursued through this tradition, means paying genuine attention to the 'donkey' within and around us—the persistent, unpretentious, earthbound reality we constantly override with ambition and ideology. This concept teaches practitioners to interrogate their dismissals and to recognize teaching wherever humility appears.
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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