Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Examined Climb: Questions at Every Switchback

A contemplative practice of pausing at each stage of mountain ascent to question assumptions and motivations.

Nas
Why It Matters

Central to the examined life is relentless questioning, a practice Nasreddin Hodja embodied through his seemingly simple queries that exposed hidden assumptions. In mountains and high places, this concept becomes a structured reflection practice: at each major transition point, pause to question. Why am I climbing? What am I seeking? What am I fleeing? What stories am I telling myself about this mountain? Hodja's tradition teaches that mountains amplify our self-deceptions—altitude affects not just oxygen but clarity of mind. By practicing the examined climb, we transform mere physical exertion into philosophical inquiry. Each switchback becomes a moment for honest assessment rather than blind momentum. This approach prevents the dangerous self-deception of mountain climbing, where exhaustion and ego conspire to override wisdom. The examined climb honors both the mountain's challenge and the climber's inner landscape.

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