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Mountains as Koan: Questions Without Answers

Treating mountains as Zen-like koans—impossible questions that generate wisdom through sustained engagement rather than solution.

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Why It Matters

Zen koans are paradoxical questions designed not to be solved but to transform the questioner through contemplation. Nasreddin's stories function similarly—they don't resolve into lessons but generate understanding through pondering. Mountains can be approached as koans: Why do we climb? What is the summit's value? What have we conquered if we've only exhausted ourselves? These questions have no final answers; yet sustained engagement with them generates genuine wisdom. The examined joyful life involves treating mountains not as problems to solve (summit achieved, goal complete) but as inexhaustible sources of contemplation. Each climb is a fresh encounter with the same koan: What does it mean to ascend? What am I actually seeking? This framework liberates climbers from the need for closure. You don't need to summit to have engaged the mountain meaningfully; you don't need to answer the questions to be changed by asking them. Nasreddin's tradition suggests that the deepest teaching often comes through unresolved tension, unanswered questions, and the wisdom that accumulates from repeatedly encountering the same impossibility without demanding resolution. Mountains excel at being koans: they offer themselves fully yet withhold final understanding, inviting climbers into perpetual, joyful inquiry.

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