Training attention to notice mismatches between expectation and reality as signals where important learning lives.
Nasreddin's stories create incongruity—we expect one thing and encounter another, generating laughter and dissonance. This gap between expectation and reality is fertile ground for examination. Incongruity as teacher trains us to notice when our mental maps don't match actual territory, when our assumptions collide with facts. In the examined natural life, incongruity becomes a compass pointing toward blind spots and unexamined beliefs. The tradition teaches that wherever we experience surprise, confusion, or cognitive discomfort, genuine learning waits. By deliberately seeking incongruity—noticing moments when reality deviates from expectation—we create regular wake-up calls. This practice develops what Nasreddin exemplifies: radical attentiveness to what actually is versus what we thought should be. Over time, this sharpens perception and makes us less subject to our own self-deception.
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