Embracing lifelong learning and the perpetual beginner's mind in hobbies rather than pursuing false completion or expertise.
Hodja remains fundamentally a student—bewildered, questioning, always discovering contradictions in what he thought he knew. In modern hobby culture, mastery is the implied goal: become skilled, achieve expertise, reach competence. Nasreddin's tradition inverts this by suggesting that genuine engagement requires remaining perpetually unfinished. A hobby examined fully never reaches completion; depth multiplies rather than resolves. The examined life includes tolerance for never fully understanding your own practice. As you deepen in gardening, painting, or any pursuit, questions multiply rather than diminish. This isn't failure but the sign of genuine engagement. By releasing the fantasy of eventual mastery and competence, you access the perpetual richness of beginner's mind—where attention remains alive because you're not performing expertise but genuinely exploring. Incompleteness becomes freedom.
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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