A contemplative hiking practice combining ecological observation with playful presence, grounding scientific naturalism in embodied joy and sensory immediacy.
Nasreddin Hodja wandered his village on his donkey, encountering wisdom in ordinary moments through careful attention and good humor. The Examined Joyful Walk translates this into a contemporary practice: deliberate nature immersion where scientific curiosity and bodily joy are inseparable. Unlike the extractive approach that treats nature as data to harvest, this practice involves slow movement through ecosystems while attending to sensory detail—lichen patterns, soil composition, bird calls—with genuine delight. You might examine the physics of water flow while delighting in the creek's cold splash on your feet. Notice the chemistry of photosynthesis while appreciating the beauty of green. This practice dissolves the false split between objective study and subjective experience, revealing that rigorous naturalism and lived joy are not competing but complementary. By anchoring scientific understanding in the body's direct experience of natural systems, we transform naturalism from an intellectual abstraction into an embodied spirituality that sanctifies walking, observation, and the simple pleasure of being alive in a comprehensible, wondrous world.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.