Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Paradox of Dependency

Understanding how caring for a dependent creature paradoxically frees you from the illusions of control.

Nas
Why It Matters

Nasreddin Hodja's stories constantly invert expectations: the fool becomes wise, the loss becomes gain, the servant becomes the teacher. Applied to companion animals, this explores how dependency works in both directions. You feed your cat, yet the cat has made you responsible, reshaping your time and priorities. You think you control your dog's training, yet the dog has trained you into consistency and presence. This paradox dissolves the illusion of dominion that much pet ownership assumes. Your animal depends on you, yes—but this dependency is not weakness; it's a profound form of power and teaching. The Hodja would laugh at the person who thinks they own their pet; the pet owns the person's attention, heart, and daily structure. This framework reframes caregiving not as burden but as liberation from the fiction of autonomy. By accepting your genuine interdependence with your animal, you stop performing the role of master and discover something more honest: you are both participants in a shared narrative, each dependent on the other's presence.

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