Using contradiction and absurdity as tools for decision-making when facing the unclear terrain of mountains.
Mountains present constant paradoxes: to go forward you must sometimes retreat; to reach the summit you must accept you may never arrive; to feel safe you must acknowledge danger. Nasreddin's method of teaching through contradictory stories mirrors the logic required in alpine environments. His famous tale of looking for keys under the streetlamp—not where he lost them but where the light is—becomes a practice for mountain navigation: sometimes the path forward isn't the direct route but the visible one. In high places, paradoxical thinking prevents the rigid certainty that kills climbers. The examined joyful life embraces these contradictions rather than resolving them, finding freedom in the acceptance that mountains operate by their own absurd logic. This framework transforms confusion into a reliable navigation tool.
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