The Hodja's celebration of activities with no external outcome teaches adults to value play for its own sake, not for optimization.
Many Nasreddin tales feature actions that seem pointless—sweeping moonlight, selling invisible cloth, searching for a lost key under the lamppost. These stories embody a profound inversion of modern productivity culture. True play, Nasreddin suggests, is precisely that which serves no market purpose, generates no status, and produces no measurable result. For adults trained to justify every hour through output, this is radical permission-giving. Productive uselessness is not laziness; it is the deliberate cultivation of activities chosen purely for the pleasure, presence, or absurdity they contain. Drawing without purpose, playing music alone, building with blocks, improvising conversation—these become acts of resistance against the colonization of joy by the metric of return. Nasreddin's humor thrives in this space: the freedom to be utterly inefficient is itself the point, and the laughter proves it.
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