The practice of examining what unnecessary weight adults carry that prevents play, using Hodja's donkey stories as mirrors for self-imposed seriousness.
Nasreddin Hodja frequently appears in tales riding his donkey backwards, carrying burdens upside-down, or creating absurd complications. This concept invites adults to identify the invisible loads they carry—status anxiety, productivity obsession, role rigidity—that make play feel frivolous or impossible. By examining these burdens through Hodja's playful lens, we recognize how much adult seriousness is self-imposed theater rather than necessity. The wisdom here isn't to abandon responsibility, but to notice when we've confused burden-carrying with virtue. Adults who adopt this practice begin questioning: What am I carrying that I could set down? What rules did I forget were invented by people like me? This philosophical audit creates space for play to re-emerge not as escape, but as intelligent resistance to unnecessary weight.
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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