Treating play with companion animals as meditative engagement that dissolves the boundary between seriousness and joy.
Hodja teaches through play—his stories delight and confuse, entertain and instruct simultaneously. Play is his primary domain of wisdom. With companion animals, play serves the same multi-layered function. When we truly play with a pet, we abandon the adult's burden of meaning-making and enter the animal's domain of present-moment engagement. A dog playing tug-of-war doesn't wonder about the rope's existential significance; it simply engages fully. A cat pouncing on a toy doesn't question the point. Yet in joining them in play, we access something we've trained ourselves to ignore: the sufficiency of engagement itself. This kind of play has no external goal, no productive outcome. It's examined joy—we notice even as we participate that we've entered a state of complete presence. Hodja's wisdom recognizes that spiritual depth and playfulness are not opposites but allies. Regular play with companion animals isn't entertainment or pet exercise—it's practice in the kind of present, purposeless engagement that constitutes the examined joyful life. Through our pets' complete commitment to play, we relearn freedom.
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