Your pet acts as a mirror reflecting your own patterns, attachments, and unconscious behaviors back to you without judgment.
Hodja's fool figure—himself or his donkey—serves as a mirror showing foolishness to wise people and wisdom to fools. Your companion animal functions similarly, reflecting your emotional state, your patterns, and your truest self. When your dog mirrors your anxiety or your cat ignores your need for approval, these are teachings. Animals lack the social performance humans use to hide; they respond to congruence or incongruence between your words and energy. If your pet won't obey, perhaps you're not truly present. If your animal seems anxious, consider what you're unconsciously transmitting. Hodja teaches that foolishness recognized becomes wisdom, and the fool who sees himself clearly transcends foolishness. Your pet, without judgment or agenda, continuously shows you yourself. Rather than dismissing their responses as mere animal behavior, you can read them as honest feedback about your authenticity. This mirror practice transforms pet ownership from one-way care into mutual awakening.
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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