The joyful practice of treating high places as spaces for genuine play—not recklessness, but the sacred playfulness that serious mountaineers often miss.
In Nasreddin Hodja's world, play and wisdom are not opposites but partners. The Hodja plays with ideas, language, and situations to reveal hidden meanings. Mountains, especially their dangerous edges, seem to demand seriousness. Yet this concept inverts that expectation: the examined joyful life embraces play at high places, not as distraction from danger but as a mature response to it. True play at the precipice doesn't ignore the cliff; it dances with awareness of it. The Hodja's tradition teaches that playfulness—curiosity, improvisation, delight in the moment—actually sharpens our attention. When we bring the attitude of play to mountains, we notice more: the particular way light hits stone, the specific quality of each vista, the unique character of our own breathing. Play becomes a form of prayer, a way of honoring the mountain's presence. This concept suggests that the most profound experiences at high places come not from grimly pursuing achievement but from allowing ourselves genuine delight in the sensory, emotional, and spiritual reality of being there.
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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