A framework for examining what we actually need to carry up mountains versus what habit and fear compel us to burden ourselves with.
In Hodja's tales, the mule consistently demonstrates superior judgment about weight, pace, and necessity—often rejecting what humans insist must be carried. This concept applies directly to mountaineering as a metaphor for life: what burden have we inherited? What have we convinced ourselves is essential? The mule, moving slowly up a steep path with limited oxygen, instinctively releases what doesn't serve survival and progress. High places strip away delusion about necessity. Wind tests our gear. Cold reveals true insulation. Altitude exposes what genuinely matters. By observing nature's creatures navigating mountains—how they move, what they carry, when they rest—we learn a playful pragmatism. The examined joyful life in high places involves regular inventory: Do I need this belief? Am I carrying this expectation uselessly? What would the mule refuse? This doesn't require asceticism but honest appraisal. Mountains naturally enforce this economy: excess becomes suffering, clarity becomes survival, and the mule's simple wisdom becomes our most reliable teacher.
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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