In high places, light behaves differently; attention to this play trains the capacity to see what is genuinely present rather than assumed.
At altitude, the sky is darker, shadows sharper, light more vivid—and these transformations shift perception. Nasreddin's tradition emphasizes play as a serious practice of attention: like a child watching light move through water, the examined person watches reality's manifestations. In mountains and high places, this becomes tangible. The light behaves strangely at 10,000 feet; what appears blue in the distance is white at hand; shadows hold detail rather than obscurity. This concept invites using altitude as a training ground for precision perception. How much of what we believe about reality is assumption versus what we actually see? Nasreddin frequently confuses appearance with reality, and the joke is on us—we do the same constantly. Mountains, by virtue of their clarity, teach us to look. The examined joyful life includes developing capacity to see without interpretation. Spend time simply watching light move across the slope, noticing how the world appears at different times. This trains the mind to distinguish between what is and what you're projecting. The mountain's light is honest teacher.
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