A practice of entering your companion animal's frame of reference through play, using humor and improvisation rather than command or control.
In Nasreddin tales, humor often emerges from his willingness to enter other perspectives, particularly when those perspectives seem foolish. With companion animals, play becomes a sophisticated practice when approached through this lens. Rather than directing your pet's play (fetch means bring it back, games have rules), practice entering their spontaneous logic. Your cat bats at a toy at inexplicable angles; join the logic of that movement rather than redirect it. Your dog suddenly races in circles; notice the joy without demanding it serve your purposes. The Nasreddin approach to play with animals means temporarily surrendering your agenda. This isn't about being permissive but about genuine mutual participation. When you play the animal's game by their rules, you practice flexibility, presence, and humor. You also experience the world through their physical and temporal logic. A dog's sudden enthusiasm for a leaf exists in a different temporal scale than your schedule. By playing along, you expand your own capacity for joy in the immediate and seemingly insignificant. This framework transforms pet play from exercise-compliance into genuine encounter and wisdom practice.
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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