Practicing voluntary simplicity and resource reduction as a paradoxical strength, learning to want less so animals need not suffer more.
The Hodja famously appears foolish by conventional measures: he pursues unconventional paths, questions obvious truths, and sometimes practices deliberate simplicity. Yet his 'foolishness' often proves wiser than the conventional wisdom he rejects. Applied to animal ethics, this concept embraces what might seem like sacrifice—eating less meat, wearing simpler clothes, consuming fewer products—as genuine wisdom rather than deprivation. Consumer culture demands that we want more, treat animals as resources to convert into goods, and measure prosperity by accumulation. Restraint appears foolish in this context, yet it's profoundly intelligent. The Hodja teaches that freedom comes through wanting less, not more. Fewer possessions mean fewer demands on animals and ecosystems. This isn't about guilt-driven asceticism but joyful simplification—the pleasure of a simple meal, the freedom of uncomplicated clothing, the peace of wanting little. By practicing restraint, we move from exploitation to something closer to reverence. The paradox: appearing foolish in the eyes of consumer culture, we actually become wiser about what constitutes genuine wellbeing.
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