Understanding playfulness and humor as genuine ethical positions that reveal moral truths through delight rather than solemnity.
Nasreddin Hodja's entire tradition rests on play—not as frivolous distraction but as genuine wisdom practice. Play allows us to experiment, reverse roles, try on different perspectives, and discover truth through joy rather than obligation. For animal ethics, this suggests that moral transformation needn't require guilt, doom, or grim sacrifice. The examined joyful life includes playful engagement with animals and nature. Playing with a dog, gardening with attentiveness, observing animal behavior with curiosity and delight—these are legitimate ethical practices. They build genuine relationship and awareness rather than abstract commitment. Hodja's humor often exposes absurdity, but it does so with warmth and affection, not contempt. This framework suggests that animal ethics grounded in play, curiosity, and genuine delight may be more sustainable and transformative than ethics rooted in guilt or fear. It also implies that our current animal practices might be reconceived not just as wrong but as unfunny—missing the joy available in more genuine relationships with the creatures sharing our world.
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.