Using intentional questioning and inquiry as a primary tool for generating creative possibilities.
Rather than offering answers, Nasreddin Hodja typically responds to inquiries with riddles, questions, and paradoxes that invite the questioner into deeper thinking. This tradition honors the question itself as a creative act. In Play and creativity, we often rush toward solutions, foreclosing the fertile space of genuine wondering. By deliberately practicing questioning—asking "What if?", "Why not?", "What am I not seeing?"—we remain in the creative void longer, allowing possibilities to emerge organically. This Hodja-inspired practice treats questions not as signs of ignorance but as instruments of discovery. When a creative block appears, instead of frantically seeking answers, we pause to ask better questions. What attracts me here? What contradictions are at play? What would delight me rather than satisfy convention? The question becomes a creative practice itself, deepening our relationship with the creative material and ourselves.
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