Observing what you hunger for at dawn and what satisfies you at dusk, using appetite as a mirror for values and truth.
Nasreddin eats, drinks, desires, and complains about his appetites with remarkable directness and humor. The Examined Appetite Practice treats hunger—physical and metaphorical—as wisdom material. At sunrise, notice what you crave: food, attention, success, peace, distraction. Don't judge; observe. What does this appetite tell you about what your being actually needs today? At sunset, review what genuinely satisfied you and what left you hollow. Did you mistake one appetite for another? Did stimulation masquerade as nourishment? This practice grounds wisdom in the body and the concrete. Hodja shows that examining appetite without asceticism or indulgence reveals truth about yourself and the world. Your appetites aren't enemies or shameful; they're data. By attending to them at thresholds, you align action with authentic need rather than habit or conditioning.
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