Recovering the fresh, unprejudiced way of seeing that companion animals model, free from conceptual overlay and interpretation.
The Hodja often perceives situations with a kind of innocent directness that more 'sophisticated' people miss—not from stupidity but from freedom from preconception. A dog sees a stranger simply as a stranger, without the accumulated prejudices and fears that humans project onto the unknown. Companion animals live in direct sensory perception: they smell, see, hear, and feel without the filter of narrative meaning-making that dominates human consciousness. This concept invites us to practice 'innocent perception'—temporarily suspending our interpretive frameworks and seeing what's actually there. When your pet acts anxious, instead of immediately narrating 'they have separation anxiety' (a story), can you observe the specific behaviors: panting, pacing, whining? This shift from conceptual to direct perception mirrors the meditative practices across wisdom traditions. The Hodja's wisdom suggests that by observing how animals inhabit their senses, we can recover a more immediate relationship with reality, less mediated by thought and interpretation.
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.