Using humor and joy to regulate breathing during running, transforming exertion into play through genuine amusement.
The Hodja's tradition teaches that laughter and wisdom are inseparable—both involve sudden shifts in perspective. Applied to running in nature, this becomes a respiratory practice: allow yourself to laugh at the absurdity of human effort, the landscape's indifference, your own pretensions. This laughter naturally regulates breathing, preventing the tight chest and mental strain that comes from grim determination. When you run in forests or fields and genuinely smile at a squirrel's chaos or your own clumsiness, your diaphragm engages differently. The breath becomes playful rather than panicked. This practice reconnects running with childhood joy—running because movement itself is delightful, not because discipline demands it. The examined joyful life requires this lightness; the Hodja shows us that wisdom and laughter together dissolve the artificial boundary between exercise and joy.
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.