Examining how the simple act of feeding a companion reveals layers of care, interdependence, and the paradox of control through surrender.
Hodja's tales frequently hinge on simple acts—eating, riding a donkey, buying and selling—that reveal profound truths through their ordinariness. Feeding a companion animal is deceptively simple: you provide nourishment, the animal eats. Yet this daily act contains multiple paradoxes worthy of Hodja's humor. You control what your pet eats, when, and how much—yet you cannot control whether it enjoys the meal, whether it digests well, or what happens next. You keep your pet alive through feeding, yet this creates dependency, making you both vulnerable to loss. You feed from instincts of care, yet the animal follows instincts of appetite. The Hodja would note the cosmic joke: the caretaker and the cared-for are locked in an impossible mutual dependency, each needing the other's role to be complete. By examining this paradox of nourishing care, we see how control and surrender dance together. The examined joyful life doesn't solve this paradox; it laughs at it, accepts it, and finds deep satisfaction in the impossible privilege of keeping another being alive through daily devotion.
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