An ethical framework for necessary killing that involves full awareness, gratitude, and ceremony rather than abstraction or denial.
Traditional hunting stories involve the Hodja's sometimes-foolish, sometimes-wise encounters with animals. Rather than modern industrial killing that obscures slaughter behind factory walls, the examined hunt asks practitioners to know exactly what they're taking and to acknowledge the cost. This doesn't mean all killing is justified, but it rejects the squeamishness that allows consumption without consciousness. If killing is necessary—whether for survival, predation management, or other genuine needs—the examined hunt insists on presence and gratitude. It rejects the casual abundance that enables wastefulness; it honors the animal's life through ceremony and use of every part. The Hodja's tradition emphasizes playfulness and paradox, not solemn sanctimoniousness. An examined hunt might involve ritual, storytelling, and community participation that transforms killing from shameful necessity into acknowledged reality. This framework applies to hunting, fishing, and even ethical meat consumption. By bringing consciousness to the act of taking life, we might consume less, waste nothing, and maintain our humanity rather than fracturing ourselves through denial and disconnection.
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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