An examination of how we project environmental blame outward while remaining blind to our own contradictions and complicity.
Hodja frequently appears as a fool in the marketplace, revealing through his confusion that the supposedly wise merchants are equally foolish. Environmental grief often manifests as righteous anger at corporations, governments, and 'others' who damage the planet. While systemic critique is necessary, Hodja's tradition teaches us to hold a mirror to our own consumption, assumptions, and participation in extractive systems. This concept asks: where do we project environmental destruction onto distant villains while ignoring our own daily choices? Where do we feel grief about abstract planetary damage while remaining numb to local ecosystem changes? The framework isn't about self-blame but about honest self-examination. Only by recognizing our genuine entanglement in damaging systems can we approach change with authenticity rather than performative righteousness, transforming environmental grief into grounded responsibility.
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