A meditation on the illusory nature of goals and the discovery that summits are less important than the transformation they trigger.
Many Hodja tales involve pursuing something that dissolves upon arrival. Mountains teach the same lesson: you climb toward a fixed point that seems real from below, yet when you arrive, the summit is often anticlimactic—smaller than expected, obscured by clouds, less significant than the view. This isn't failure; it's awakening. The Hodja's paradoxical wisdom suggests that the peak we seek exists primarily in imagination. What's real is the climb: the person you become through effort, the relationships forged with fellow climbers, the landscape internalized through attention. By recognizing the peak-that-isn't-there—our idealized version of arrival—we free ourselves from achievement addiction and can genuinely appreciate what the mountain actually offers: transformation through process rather than validation through destination.
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.