A practice of gratitude and release: sunrise celebrates what you have, sunset returns it, teaching non-possession through daily rhythm.
Many Hodja tales involve feasts, hunger, and the mysterious satisfaction of having nothing. The Feast and Empty Bowl practice mirrors this: at sunrise, pause to notice abundance—breath, light, thought, small comforts. Receive them as a feast freely given. At sunset, consciously release them back, knowing they were never yours to keep. This practice isn't deprivation but liberation. By treating each sunrise as a temporary gift and each sunset as a graceful return, you develop the Hodja's unusual joy—not the grasping joy of possession but the dancing joy of participation. The examined life becomes lighter when dawn and dusk remind you that clinging causes suffering while flowing with natural rhythms creates ease. This daily cycle rewires your nervous system toward trust and away from hoarding.
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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