Hodja's wisdom shows farmers how abundance and scarcity mirror each other; understanding this reflection prevents hoarding and waste across seasons.
One of Nasreddin's recurring themes involves mistaking opposites for enemies rather than teachers. In the farmer's calendar, harvest and hunger stand as mirror opposites, each revealing truths about the other. A bountiful harvest teaches nothing without the memory of hunger; hunger means nothing without the hope of harvest. Hodja's stories show characters who fail by ignoring one side of this mirror. The farmer who accumulates without understanding scarcity becomes enslaved to storage. The farmer who experiences scarcity without remembering abundance loses faith. By holding both in view simultaneously—examining how each season's opposite dwells within it—farmers develop wisdom about proportional saving, strategic planting, and realistic expectations. This mirror practice transforms seasonal anxiety into seasonal intelligence.
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