Living by the rhythms of seasons and natural cycles rather than abstract time, aligning examined life with actual conditions.
The Hodja's world is populated with particular times and seasons—spring plantings, winter hardships, feast days, famines. This concept explores how the examined natural life must be calendared differently than the modern habit of treating each day as identical and infinitely available. In nature, there is no continuous present: there are seasons of growth, seasons of dormancy, seasons of harvest. The examined natural life aligns intention with actual condition—we do not plant in winter or sleep through spring without consequence. By adopting a natural calendar, we restore rhythm to existence. We notice that some projects belong to some seasons and not others, that energy and clarity are not constant resources but wax and wane like the moon. The Hodja, though he lived in towns, remained attuned to these cycles. His teachings often reference animals' behavior in seasons, the farmer's work, the herder's knowledge. When we examine our lives against a natural calendar rather than the abstract grid of modern scheduling, we see where we have forced unnatural continuity. We ask: what does this season ask of me? What am I trying to do against the grain of actual conditions?
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.