Recognition that unplanned events, mistakes, and contingency reveal profound truth about how nature actually works, worthy of reverence rather than dismissal.
The Hodja's greatest insights often emerged from mishaps and accidents—spilled tea that revealed a lesson, a wrong turn that led somewhere meaningful. Western spirituality traditionally seeks harmony and intention, yet nature operates through contingency: mutations create diversity, continental drift was unplanned, evolutionary dead-ends reveal principles. Scientific naturalism reveals existence as fundamentally shaped by accident—the asteroid that killed dinosaurs, the random fluctuations that seeded the universe itself. This concept invites us to find sacred meaning in what wasn't designed. The accidents that shaped our individual lives, the failures that redirected our paths, the unexpected encounters that changed us—these possess a kind of spirituality precisely because they exceeded human intention. Rather than seeing accidents as deviations from an ideal plan, we can recognize them as nature's primary mode of operating. In this view, our mistakes are not spiritual failures but invitations to deeper understanding. The Hodja's freedom came partly from his capacity to find wisdom in whatever actually happened, rather than insisting that reality conform to his preferences. This radical acceptance of contingency—that nothing had to happen this way—transforms how we relate to our own unplanned existence.
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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