Nasreddin's trick-stories teach how redirecting attention from the obvious goal frees adults from the trap of single-minded seriousness.
In many Hodja tales, the listener follows the surface narrative (the lost key, the pot that won't fit through the door) while the real point emerges sideways. Misdirection is often seen as deception, but in play, it is a gift. When we expect linear progress toward a goal, we are trapped in work-consciousness. Misdirection in play breaks that trance. A game of charades, an improvisation exercise, a joke's setup-and-twist: all work through misdirection. They lead your attention one way, then snap it another, creating the delightful surprise that defines play. For adults, this is liberating because it dissolves the tyranny of the 'correct answer.' There is no one path. Misdirection teaches us to follow curiosity rather than logic, to notice what emerges rather than what was planned. Nasreddin's misdirections are not cruelties; they are invitations to dance with uncertainty. This mirrors the nature of play itself: the pleasure lies not in reaching the destination but in the playful wandering toward unknown coordinates.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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