Using seasonal cycles and natural rhythms as a curriculum for understanding change, impermanence, and renewal.
Nature teaches through cycles, and Hodja's wisdom often unfolds through seasons, returns, and the pattern of things coming and going. In birdwatching, the year becomes a teaching structure: spring migration brings energy and arrival, summer brings nesting and territorial behavior, autumn brings departure and preparation, winter brings scarcity and survival strategies. Each season presents different birds, different behaviors, different lessons. By practicing across full years, you internalize the teaching of impermanence—nothing stays the same, and that is not tragedy but the nature of things. This acceptance brings a particular kind of joy: you appreciate spring migration more because you know it will end, just as you appreciate a rare winter visitor because its presence is temporary. The examined life, lived through seasons, teaches you that change is constant and transformation is natural. You cannot look at migrating birds without contemplating your own journey, departure, return. Hodja's humor often hinges on timing and appropriateness—the right thing at the wrong time. Seasonal practice teaches you this wisdom directly through living it.
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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