Recognizing how seasons teach about life's natural rhythms, letting seasonal cycles reshape our understanding of productivity, rest, and eternal return.
Gardening exists within nature's cyclical time, where seasons return eternally, challenging modern linear thinking about progress and productivity. Hodja's wisdom often subverts linear assumptions, and gardening's seasonal nature does precisely this. Spring isn't eternally productive; winter demands dormancy; autumn teaches letting-go; each season carries its own logic and gifts. Seasonal Wisdom means aligning human activity with nature's rhythms rather than imposing our schedules onto nature. Winter's apparent death actually enables spring's renewal; rest proves as essential as growth. This cyclical understanding heals the modern disease of perpetual productivity—the notion that we should always be growing, achieving, succeeding. Gardeners naturally learn that cycles matter, that fallow periods nourish, that dormancy precedes emergence. This teaches acceptance of life's natural rhythms: we cannot garden year-round in all seasons, nor should we. By honoring seasonal cycles, gardeners integrate nature's wisdom about timing, patience, and the necessity of rest. Each season offers its own examined joyfulness when we stop fighting natural rhythms.
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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