Nasreddin's paradoxical wisdom that sometimes appearing foolish—questioning obvious assumptions, moving slowly, changing plans—reveals hidden mountain dangers others miss.
Nasreddin Hodja was often called a fool, yet his seeming foolishness concealed sharp perception. In mountaineering, conventional wisdom can kill: rush to summit before weather changes, ignore small discomforts, follow the crowd upward. Wise Stupidity is the practice of asking 'stupid' questions: Why do we need to reach the top today? What if the obvious route is wrong? What is this mountain trying to teach us through resistance? Nasreddin's fool-character would turn back when success seemed certain, or advance when prudence suggested waiting. Often he was right, not through expertise but through playful questioning of assumptions. Applied to high places, this means cultivating beginner's mind even after many summits, taking the 'foolish' path of caution, and trusting the paranoia that keeps mountaineers alive. Wisdom wears the mask of stupidity to see what intelligence misses.
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