Nasreddin's tradition of answering questions with questions makes sunrise and sunset moments for deepening inquiry rather than seeking answers.
Nasreddin Hodja teaches that wisdom emerges not from possessing answers but from asking better questions. Applied to sunrise and sunset practice, each transition becomes an opportunity to pose genuine inquiries to oneself and reality. At dawn: What am I willing not to know today? What wants to emerge that I haven't planned for? At dusk: What surprised me? Where did my certainties prove insufficient? This Sophos models how questions nourish the soul more deeply than answers, because questions keep us engaged with reality's complexity. Rather than using these daily passages to affirm existing beliefs or cement conclusions, the examined joyful life treats them as moments of fertile uncertainty. Questions humble us, opening perception beyond habit. By practicing inquiry during sunrise and sunset—our most naturally reflective times—we align outer transitions with inner awakening, making daily cycles into genuine explorations rather than routines.
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