Understanding cycles of presence and absence as containing the deepest truths about impermanence, joy, and the examined life.
Hodja's tales often turn on repetition with variation—the same situation unfolding differently based on perspective or timing. Applied to birdwatching, Seasonal Paradox and Return explores how birds disappear and reappear, teaching profound lessons about attachment, impermanence, and renewal. Winter brings absence; spring brings return. Summer abundance yields to autumn migration. The examined joyful life doesn't deny loss but examines what it teaches. Birdwatchers who practice seasonal awareness develop different relationships with different times: urgent attention during brief migration windows, patient waiting during quiet seasons, fresh delight at returning species. This cyclical practice prevents both attachment (clinging to summer abundance) and despair (overwhelmed by winter absence). Instead, it cultivates what Buddhists call mudita—sympathetic joy—recognizing that joy itself is cyclical, that endings contain beginnings, and that the paradox of return makes each presence newly precious rather than taken for granted.
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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