Using humor and absurdity to identify hidden assumptions and blind spots in how we evaluate danger and capability.
Nasreddin's humor often exposes the ridiculous premises underlying serious assumptions. Extreme athletes can apply this by using laughter as a diagnostic tool for risk assessment. When you hear yourself say 'that's insane,' the Hodja asks: is it genuinely dangerous, or are you laughing at the violation of social conventions? Humor reveals where ego, image, and unexamined beliefs drive decisions rather than actual physics and capability. A climber who can laugh at their own fear-narratives gains clarity about which anxieties are protective wisdom and which are merely internalized judgments. The examined life through Nasreddin's lens means regularly asking: what am I taking too seriously, and what dangerous assumption am I hiding beneath my careful planning? This concept transforms laughter from nervous escapism into a genuine epistemological practice—a way of knowing what you actually understand versus what you merely believe.
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.