Hodja's method of questioning everything applies to mountains: examining why we climb, what we seek, and what the peak actually promises.
The Socratic method runs through Nasreddin Hodja's tales: he asks questions that dismantle questioners' assumptions. Applied to mountains, this becomes a practice of examination before ascent. Why this peak? What do you expect to find? What will change when you reach the summit? Hodja's wisdom suggests that most climbers ascend carrying unexamined burdens: proving worth, escaping something, chasing external validation. The examined joyful life requires asking these questions honestly, in the valley before climbing. Mountains amplify whatever you bring to them. If you climb to prove yourself, altitude becomes cruel prosecutor. If you climb to escape, the peak offers nowhere left to hide. Yet if you examine your motivations and climb from genuine curiosity about landscape, self, and possibility, mountains become generous teachers. This inquiry transforms not just why you climb but how mountains transform you. The peak becomes less destination and more mirror.
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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