Shifting from seeing nature as resource or obstacle to engaging it as a partner in ongoing dialogue that shapes our choices.
Hodja stories frequently featured unexpected conversations—speaking to animals, objects, or strangers who revealed wisdom through their responses. This concept reframes our relationship with nature from monologue to dialogue. We speak our desires, and nature responds through drought, disease, migration, extinction. Rather than interpreting nature's responses as mere cause-and-effect, we can treat them as part of an ongoing conversation about sustainable coexistence. When a species disappears after we exploit it intensively, nature is speaking. When a restored habitat flourishes, it's responding. This framework prevents the arrogance of seeing ourselves as nature's sole conscious agent. We're in relationship with a responsive partner, not commanding an inert resource. The Hodja's conversations often left both parties changed, sometimes by the other's refusal to cooperate. Similarly, treating nature as a conversation partner means accepting that it won't always comply with our preferences. It sets limits, reveals consequences, and demonstrates boundaries. This makes ethical relationship with nature less about our benevolence and more about learning to listen to what the world is actually saying.
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.