Using laughter and playful perspective to navigate the disorientation and difficulty that high places inevitably bring.
The Hodja's tradition centers on humor not as escape but as clarity. At altitude, the body and mind struggle—thin air, exhaustion, isolation, and perspective shift can induce disorientation similar to altitude sickness. Nasreddin teaches that laughter in difficulty reveals truth. When you're struggling on a mountainside at 12,000 feet, the absurdity of your predicament—your huffing body, your grand ambitions meeting physical limitation—becomes either crushing or hilarious. This concept proposes laughter as medicine: not denying the difficulty, but acknowledging it with such joyful acceptance that it loses power over you. The examined joyful life includes recognizing the comedy in human striving. A climber who can laugh at their exhaustion, at the mountain's indifference, at their own pretensions, recovers emotional resilience. Nasreddin would joke with the mountain itself, treating it as a playful teacher rather than an enemy. This transforms suffering into communion.
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.