Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Examined Laughter as Spiritual Practice

Using humor not as distraction but as a tool for self-knowledge and deeper seeing during communal celebrations.

Nas
Why It Matters

Hodja's humor cuts through pretense—his stories make us laugh while simultaneously questioning our assumptions. Festivals often use humor as escapism, but examined laughter serves transformation. When we pause to ask *why* we laugh—what assumptions our laughter reveals, what truths it exposes—humor becomes philosophy. This practice invites celebrations to include moments of reflective joy: jokes that contain genuine insight, comedy sketches addressing real community tensions, playful rituals that simultaneously entertain and illuminate. The examined laugh differs from mere entertainment; it leaves participants slightly changed, seeing themselves and their world more clearly. Hodja embodies this: his seemingly ridiculous actions provoke laughter that suddenly feels like recognition. Festival gatherings can build this quality intentionally—spaces where levity and seriousness coexist, where humor serves truth-telling rather than avoiding it. This transforms laughter from collective distraction into collective awakening.

Helpful guides
Nas
Play & Joy
Peri
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