Recognizing that each major season contains multiple sub-seasons with distinct rhythms, tasks, and character, preventing oversimplified seasonal thinking.
Hodja's storytelling often contains nested layers—a story within a story, revealing new meanings at each level. Applied to the farmer's calendar, 'The Season Within the Season' acknowledges that spring contains early spring and late spring, each with different demands. Summer contains a dry season and a growing season. Autumn has early harvest and late preparation. Winter holds both dormancy and hidden underground activity. By developing sensitivity to these nested rhythms, farmers avoid the trap of treating entire seasons as monolithic blocks. This nuanced attention prevents missed opportunities and mistimed work. A farmer might discover that their particular land responds differently to early versus late spring rains. The examined life requires this level of differentiation and local knowledge. This concept honors both the grand patterns of nature and the specific, particular micro-rhythms that only careful attention reveals.
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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