Liberating yourself from social judgment and performance anxiety in hobbies by consciously adopting the role of the fool.
Hodja wears foolishness like armor against pretense—by admitting ignorance, embracing absurdity, and refusing false dignity, he becomes freer than those bound by reputation. In hobbies, most anxiety stems from fear of judgment: being bad at the hobby, looking silly, wasting time. The Hodja's tradition suggests that voluntary foolishness dissolves this bind. When you consciously embrace being a beginner, making mistakes publicly, or pursuing 'meaningless' activities, you reclaim agency from the inner critic. This isn't false humility but honest acknowledgment that mastery is irrelevant to participation's joy. By allowing yourself to be the fool in your hobby—the clumsy dancer, the terrible painter, the naive gardener—you access freedom from performance and permission to simply exist in activity. Examined foolishness reveals authentic desire beneath social armor.
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