Hodja's method of responding to questions with questions teaches us to greet sunrise and sunset with curiosity rather than certainty.
The Hodja was famous for answering questions with riddles and counter-questions that exposed hidden assumptions. Applied to sunrise and sunset practice, this means greeting each transition with genuine inquiry rather than automatic interpretation. Instead of deciding what sunrise 'means' to you, ask: What is this light asking of me? What questions does this darkness hold? This practice suspends judgment and cultivates the playful, examined mind. By maintaining a question-oriented stance toward daily transitions, you avoid the staleness of rote ritual. The Hodja's tradition suggests that the deepest wisdom emerges not from having answers, but from dwelling in productive uncertainty. Sunrise and sunset become invitations to wonder rather than opportunities for self-improvement, revealing paradoxes that enrich rather than resolve.
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