Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Donkey's Burden on the Summit

Examining what we carry upward and whether the weight serves the climb or merely exhausts us.

Nas
Why It Matters

Nasreddin Hodja famously rode his donkey backward, asking why anyone assumes the animal knows the way forward. On mountains, we often climb burdened by expectations, ambitions, and inherited wisdom we never questioned. This concept explores the paradox of ascent: the higher we climb, the more we must examine whether our load enables the journey or merely anchors us to lower thinking. The examined joyful life requires periodic assessment—what serves the climb? What merely weighs us down? Mountains teach that stripping away unnecessary burdens isn't quitting; it's wisdom. The Hodja reminds us to laugh at our seriousness, to play with what we carry, and to question which burdens we've chosen versus inherited. True altitude is gained not just by effort, but by discernment about what deserves to accompany us upward.

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