Embracing apparent stillness and 'doing nothing' as radical practice—sitting quietly for hours, seemingly foolish, reveals more than frantic seeking.
The Hodja often played the fool to reveal hidden truths. In birdwatching, this becomes sitting motionless for extended periods while others rush between locations. To the hurried observer, you're wasting time. Yet patient foolishness opens dimensions of avian life: territorial disputes, nesting behavior, seasonal patterns, and the subtle grammar of bird communication. You begin noticing which birds appear at dawn versus dusk, how they respond to weather shifts, how territories shift week to week. This practice inverts the logic of efficiency: by doing less, you perceive more. The examined joyful life finds its rhythm here—not in conquest of a species list, but in the deepening relationship with a single patch of earth and its winged inhabitants.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.