Using logical contradictions as navigational tools in high places, where traditional reasoning often fails.
Mountains present paradoxes: the higher you climb, the colder it becomes; solitude brings connection to vastness; effort sometimes requires surrender. Nasreddin Hodja's tradition embraces paradox not as confusion but as clarity. His stories teach that mountains cannot be conquered by linear thinking alone. A path that seems to go backward actually moves forward; wisdom appears foolish to the ambitious; safety lies in acknowledging danger. In high places, paradox becomes practical—a climber must be both cautious and bold, individual yet dependent on the mountain itself. This concept invites practitioners to stop resolving contradictions and instead dance with them, discovering that mountains reveal their secrets only to those who can hold multiple truths simultaneously.
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