A vision of ethical animal relationship grounded not in guilt or sacrifice but in the genuine joy of recognizing ourselves as part of a larger living community.
The Hodja's wisdom tradition ultimately celebrates life, play, and the examined joyful existence. This final concept suggests that our ethical relationship with animals need not be grim, guilt-ridden, or experienced as constant sacrifice. Instead, genuine ethics toward nature can emerge from joy—the delight of watching birds, the pleasure of a dog's companionship, the wonder of encountering wild things thriving. When we shift from a framework of domination to one of kinship, ethics becomes natural rather than imposed. We protect what we love, we cherish what brings us joy, we become careful with what matters to us. The Hodja knew that people change through joy more than through obligation. A child who has felt genuine wonder observing nature becomes an adult who protects it. A person who has experienced the presence of an animal as a true other becomes someone for whom cruelty becomes unthinkable. This concept reframes animal ethics not as burden but as invitation: to remember that we are creatures among creatures, to participate in the joy of living in a world full of other conscious beings, and to build our ethical relationship with nature from delight and wonder rather than from shame and compulsion.
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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