Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Riddle of Stillness

True stillness is not freezing but dynamic balance—a paradoxical motion-within-rest that aligns you with the bird's own state.

Nas
Why It Matters

Nasreddin's riddles often pose opposites that are secretly the same. The Riddle of Stillness asks: how can you be both completely still and fully alive? In birdwatching, motionlessness is often prescribed, but rigid freezing distances you from the natural world. True stillness, learned through the Hodja's tradition, is dynamic—breath flowing, heart beating, awareness moving. It is the stillness of a hunting hawk, poised but alive, or a listening songbird. This paradoxical state aligns your body with nature's rhythms. When you achieve this riddle, birds no longer see you as alien threat; they perceive a fellow creature at rest within the living world. The practice develops through sustained attention: not forcing yourself still, but allowing movement to settle naturally into balance. This Riddle of Stillness transforms waiting from endurance into meditation.

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