Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Paradox of Possession: Owning What You Cannot Keep

Exploring the paradoxical nature of pet ownership as a practice in accepting impermanence and the inevitable loss that accompanies all companionship.

Nas
Why It Matters

To have a companion animal is to enter into a contract with mortality. You can feed, shelter, and love your pet, yet you cannot protect it from illness, aging, or death. The Hodja tradition finds profound wisdom in this impossible paradox. You possess something you cannot truly keep. You build a relationship destined to end. You invest in a life that will, almost certainly, outlive you or that you will outlive. Rather than denying this reality through false hope or avoiding pets to prevent pain, the Hodja approach celebrates this paradox as the most honest form of love available to humans. By accepting that your companion animal's life span is limited, you practice acceptance of impermanence itself. Each day becomes more precious because it is finite. Each routine becomes sacred because it will not always be available. This examined joyful life acknowledges that the deepest loves contain grief—not as tragedy but as proof of genuine connection. The paradox of possessing what you cannot keep transforms pet ownership from consumption into genuine relationship, where you meet the reality of existence with eyes open and heart full.

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