Embracing the Hodja's fool-role to grant yourself permission for seemingly pointless wandering, exploration, and play in high places without justification.
Nasreddin Hodja succeeds through apparent foolishness, accomplishing through wrong-headedness what careful planning cannot. Mountains invite this same permission: wander where there is no trail, explore without destination, play without purpose. The examined life often becomes too examined, trapped in productivity and meaning-making. The Hodja teaches that foolishness is sometimes wisdom. In high places, where the air is thin and the world already seems absurd, you can permit yourself foolish behavior: sing at summits, talk to stones, take paths simply because they curve. This permission matters because mountains themselves seem foolish—vast indifferent stone offering nothing but difficulty. By embracing your own foolishness, you align with the mountain's nature and find unexpected joy. The examined joyful life, Hodja-style, includes periods of purposeful non-examination, playful wandering, and the wisdom of not-knowing. High places offer perfect theater for this performance: you are a fool on a mountain, and the mountain approves.
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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