Reframing the summit itself as purposefully useless—valuable precisely because it serves no function except the pleasure of arriving and being there.
The Hodja's stories often find value in apparent uselessness: a broken pot, a foolish question, a journey that leads nowhere. Summits are perfectly useless: they produce nothing, solve nothing, change nothing in the world below. This is their perfection. In a life of constant productivity and purpose, the summit offers sacred uselessness. You climb to be there, for no other reason. This seems frivolous until recognized as profound: the only summit worth reaching is one pursued for itself alone. Nasreddin teaches that the examined joyful life includes activities requiring no justification. High places offer natural temples for this practice. The joy emerges precisely from releasing utility and embracing the journey as complete in itself. Arriving at a summit after struggle, you encounter the deepest satisfaction: you are here, you climbed, and nothing further need happen.
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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