A seasonal wisdom principle where apparent scarcity (drought, fallow, winter) becomes the soil's teacher about future abundance.
Nasreddin's tales often feature reversals where loss becomes gift, emptiness becomes fullness. The dry well teaches this paradox seasonally: when water vanishes in drought, the farmer cannot force nature's hand, yet must trust the cycle. The fallow season appears barren but restores what constant cropping depletes. Winter's cold seems hostile yet breaks disease cycles and prepares spring vitality. Rather than fighting these dry seasons through expensive irrigation or amendments, the examined farmer asks what wisdom they carry. What does the land teach when nothing grows? Patience. Timing. Humility before natural limits. The Hodja's paradoxical vision suggests that resisting dry seasons wastes energy, while surrendering to them—while simultaneously preparing—deepens seasonal understanding. The joyful life emerges not from endless abundance but from recognizing that scarcity seasons are essential teachers, creating the conditions where future plenty becomes possible and meaningful.
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