A diagnostic practice for identifying the specific ways human ambition, ego, and poor judgment manifest uniquely in high-altitude environments and mountaineering culture.
Hodja tales frequently expose human folly through seemingly simple situations that reveal deeper absurdities. Mountains amplify human folly in distinctive ways: we risk our lives for views, we compete over summits, we mistake physical elevation for spiritual advancement, we ignore warning signs because of ego investment. The Hodja's humorous tradition helps us name these specific follies without shame or judgment. Mountain folly recognition asks: What ridiculous beliefs drive me upward? Am I climbing because I genuinely love mountains, or because I fear being ordinary? Do I respect the mountain's actual conditions, or only my image of conquering it? This practice draws on the Hodja's genius for revealing how reasonable people believe absurd things. By cataloging mountain follies—the vanity of conquering peaks, the delusion that hardship builds character, the spiritual bypass of using altitude to escape earthly problems—we can climb with greater awareness. The practice becomes playful rather than punitive, transforming potential embarrassment into self-knowledge. Mountains then become stages for witnessing our own human comedy.
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.