Centering festival moments around profound questions rather than celebratory conclusions, trusting inquiry itself as the celebration.
The Question More Important Than Answer inverts the assumption that celebrations should culminate in resolution, closure, or clear answers. Nasreddin Hodja's tales often end in puzzlement, leaving audiences to wrestle with implications rather than receiving neat conclusions. This concept structures festivals around questions posed with genuine openness: What does this community truly value? Who are we when no one's watching? What would we celebrate if money were irrelevant? How do we honor loss within joy? Rather than processing these questions toward answers, the framework keeps them alive throughout the celebration, letting participants sit with uncertainty while building community. This prevents festivals from becoming propaganda for predetermined conclusions while honoring the human need for meaning-making. By trusting questions more than answers, celebrations become spaces of genuine inquiry where participants co-create understanding rather than consuming pre-packaged meaning. The practice teaches that authentic celebration requires embracing mystery and ambiguity.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.