The counterintuitive principle that seasons of apparent scarcity often produce genuine abundance, and perceived abundance can mask hidden depletion, training farmers to look beyond surface appearances.
A lean season forces efficiency, eliminates waste, and reveals what truly matters; farmers report that post-drought years produce exceptional crops because the challenge revealed and corrected hidden problems. A season of overwhelming abundance can deplete soil invisibly or foster dependency on external inputs. Hodja's wisdom consistently revealed that obvious solutions often led to unexpected problems, and apparent difficulties contained hidden benefits. Applied to seasonal farming, this means the farmer who experiences a difficult spring—late frost, late rains, struggling seedlings—has gained something valuable: knowledge of which varieties truly perform, understanding of microclimate challenges, practice in problem-solving. The farmer comfortable with abundance risks complacency and hidden degradation. This concept invites the farmer to develop what might be called 'seasonal humility'—skepticism toward years that seem easy, gratitude for years that demand adaptation. Paradoxically, by embracing seasonal difficulty as meaningful teaching rather than mere obstacle, the farmer achieves more resilient, genuinely abundant long-term results.
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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