Using humor and laughter at sunrise and sunset thresholds to soften the ego's defenses and open the heart to genuine presence.
Hodja's primary teaching tool was laughter—not mockery, but the kind of laughter that breaks through pretense and dissolves defensive walls. His stories are funny first; wisdom arrives through the laughter. Laughter is a threshold phenomenon: it shifts our state instantly, loosens our grip on seriousness, makes us vulnerable and open. At sunrise and sunset, we might practice beginning and ending the day with intentional laughter or lightness. Not forced performance, but a soft smile acknowledging the cosmic joke: we take ourselves so seriously, yet the sun rises and sets indifferent to our dramas. This laughter is not dismissive—it's tender. It says: 'Yes, life is difficult and beautiful and absurd, and here we are anyway.' Hodja's laughter taught acceptance without bitterness. Practicing this daily at natural thresholds weakens the ego's grip gradually. We become lighter, more resilient, more genuinely joyful because less defended. The guardian at the threshold of each day becomes not fear or ambition, but laughter—the Hodja's gift.
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