A practice of ascending mountains through genuine inquiry rather than predetermined knowledge, staying present to what emerges.
Nasreddin Hodja navigated high places not with fixed maps but with living questions: What if the peak isn't the goal? What does this stone reveal about gravity? Why did the mule stop here? This concept shifts mountaineering from route-following to continuous inquiry. Instead of planning the ascent, we ask at each elevation what wants to be discovered, what the terrain teaches, what our body signals. High places demand this responsiveness—weather changes, conditions shift, assumptions crumble. The examined joyful life emerges when we replace the expert's predetermined answers with the learner's genuine questions. Nature responds to honest inquiry in ways it never responds to authority. This practice builds wisdom through dialogue with the mountain itself: its stone, its wind, its silence. Every elevation becomes a conversation partner rather than an obstacle, transforming the climb from conquest into communion.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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