The Hodja found wisdom in the natural world; observing your companion's instincts teaches you about existence itself.
Though the Hodja's tales are urban and human-centered, his tradition deeply honors nature as a source of paradoxical wisdom. A companion animal, regardless of domestication, retains its animal nature—its instincts, its rhythms, its way of being. Watching a dog's focus, a cat's hunting precision, a bird's attentiveness, or a rabbit's alert stillness reveals something about how consciousness works across species. The practice is patient observation without judgment: how does your animal move through the world? What matters to them? How do they solve problems? What brings them genuine pleasure? The Hodja would recognize in these observations a mirror of human nature itself. We are also animals, also driven by hunger and curiosity and fear and play. Your companion animal can teach you about presence, about living in the moment, about wanting what you actually have rather than what you imagine. This isn't sentimentality; it's rigorous attention to a being's actual nature.
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.