Using laughter and wit as direct tools for psychological liberation, not merely as coping mechanisms or tension relief.
In Nasreddin Hodja tales, laughter is never trivial—it's the moment of sudden seeing, the crack in fixed perspective, the liberation from suffering through recognition of its essential absurdity. This is very different from gallows humor or distraction. In play therapy, this framework invites therapists to recognize and cultivate moments of genuine humor as therapeutic pivots. When a child laughs genuinely at the absurdity of a situation they've been serious about, something shifts neurologically and psychologically. The nervous system accesses a different frequency. This concept guides therapists to distinguish between healthy humor that opens new perception and humor that avoids or bypasses necessary feeling. When appropriately timed and authentic, humor becomes a direct tool for transformation—not to overcome emotion but to gain freedom from being locked in a single emotional perspective. The Hodja tradition honors laughter as wisdom-medicine.
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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