Practicing genuine gratitude toward plants, ecosystems, and gifts of food as both ethical practice and source of joy.
The Hodja's wisdom often hinges on recognizing what we've been given and acknowledging our dependency. Foraging naturally cultivates gratitude—we recognize that wild food appears not through our effort alone but through soil fertility, proper weather, and ecological health. Each successful harvest invites appreciation for the complex systems that brought it forth. The examined joyful life flows from this genuine gratitude, not performed sentiment. Before harvesting, pause with real recognition: this plant required years to grow, this ecosystem maintained itself without my intervention, this food arrives as gift. This gratitude transforms foraging from extraction into reciprocal relationship. It naturally generates restraint—you don't over-harvest something you genuinely appreciate. It motivates care—gratitude leads to leaving the forest better than we found it. It deepens joy—food gathered with recognition of its origins tastes different. The Hodja teaches that such gratitude isn't burden or obligation but the natural human response to genuine abundance and generosity.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.