Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Paradox of Feeding: Giving and Receiving

Recognizing that feeding an animal is simultaneously about nourishing them and being nourished by the relationship.

Nas
Why It Matters

The Hodja often finds himself in absurd situations around basic sustenance—feeding the donkey, seeking food, questioning what truly nourishes. With companion animals, feeding becomes a daily paradox. We believe we feed them; simultaneously, the act of feeding nourishes us with purpose, routine, and presence. A cat's purr while eating, a dog's enthusiastic greeting at meal time, a bird's song before breakfast—these moments feed something in us beyond nutrition. The Nasreddin tradition plays with this reversibility: who truly depends on whom? When we commit to feeding a creature daily, we create structure that feeds our own need for meaning. When we observe how our animal savors food, we remember sensory joy. The examined joyful life with companion animals means embracing this mutual feeding without trying to separate giver from receiver, owner from dependent. Both roles contain truth simultaneously.

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