Investigating the paradoxes of selfhood—that we are both fixed and fluid, individual and interconnected, known and unknowable.
Hodja stories frequently play with identity confusion: he's simultaneously wise fool, learned ignoramus, serious joker. Rather than resolving these contradictions, his tradition invites us to examine them as fundamental to consciousness itself. The examined contradiction of identity recognizes that selfhood cannot be pinned down, that we contain multitudes, and that this multiplicity is not a flaw but a feature. We are indeed the same person we were yesterday, yet entirely new in every moment. We know ourselves intimately, yet remain perpetually mysterious to ourselves. In the examined playful life, instead of seeking a coherent unified self, we study how identity actually functions: contextual, adaptive, performing, yet somehow continuous. This examination dissolves the tension between authenticity and persona: both are simultaneously real and constructed. By playfully experimenting with different identities—different roles, perspectives, ways of being—we become less attached to any fixed notion of who we are. This generates freedom: if identity is fluid and examined, we need not be imprisoned by our history, our roles, or our previous conclusions about ourselves.
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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