Engaging in purposeless activity as a fundamental way of being alive, reconnecting with natural joy outside instrumental goals.
Children and animals play; this is not preparation for life but life itself. Nasreddin's tales embody playful engagement with existence—testing boundaries, exploring absurdities, pursuing whimsies without expectation of return. The examined natural life recovers play from its exile into 'recreation' or 'development' and recognizes it as central to being human. Play is the mode in which we experiment with identity, test social boundaries, and experience genuine freedom. It is how we practice without stakes and learn without shame. This concept challenges the productivity paradigm that colonizes all human time. Nature exhibits perpetual play: young animals wrestling, birds performing aerial maneuvers, patterns appearing for their own sake. By protecting space for purposeless activity—games, creative expression, movement, conversation—we honor our animal nature and maintain the flexibility that rigid seriousness erodes.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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