A reflective pause practice where players question why they play each move, revealing unconscious habit and opening new possibilities.
Socratic examination lies at the heart of Hodja's pedagogy. In games, most moves flow from habit, precedent, or shallow calculation. The Examined Move invites players to pause before each action and ask: Why this move? What assumption supports it? What would happen if I questioned it? This simple practice transforms play from automatic to conscious. In chess, it might mean reconsidering the 'natural' developing move. In card games, it means examining why you follow conventional play order. Hodja taught that joy emerges from active thinking, not passive following. The Examined Move returns agency to players. It slows the game, deepens engagement, and often reveals better options than muscle memory would suggest. This is the examined joyful life applied to play: consciousness itself becomes the deepest strategy, and self-knowledge becomes the sharpest tool.
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