Nasreddin's stories often feature him looking in the wrong direction, teaching that ancestral knowledge about wild foods requires deliberate attention to what modern culture ignores.
In one tale, Nasreddin searches for his lost key under a streetlamp not because he lost it there, but because that's where the light is. Modern foraging often mirrors this: we search for edible plants in field guides rather than in the actual ecological knowledge of the place we inhabit. The wisdom of looking backward means studying your region's indigenous food traditions, asking elders what they foraged, observing which plants your grandmother cultivated and why. It means recognizing that 'worthless weeds' are often the most nutritious plants—purslane, wild garlic, acorns—because dominant culture systematized agriculture around other species. By deliberately turning away from commercial convenience and toward historical practice, you discover that the wild foods you seek were never lost; you simply stopped looking where your ancestors always knew to find them. This practice of examined attention to what we've abandoned becomes its own form of joyful recovery, reconnecting you to a continuity of human relationship with place.
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.