A cyclical wisdom framework recognizing that mountains teach different lessons in different seasons, and that returning repeatedly deepens understanding.
The Hodja's stories often return to the same themes and places with variations, revealing new meanings through repetition and seasonal change. Mountains are supremely seasonal—the same peak in summer invites play, in autumn demands attention, in winter requires respect bordering on fear. This concept applies cyclical understanding to mountains and high places, suggesting that wisdom accumulates through repeated visits across seasons and years. Spring mountains teach renewal and fragility; summer mountains offer abundance and exposure; autumn mountains demonstrate release and preparation; winter mountains reveal essence stripped of decoration. The Hodja teaches that repetition with attention creates deepening wisdom rather than boredom. Each return to the mountains, each season of climbing, each decade of high-place engagement adds layers to understanding. The examined joyful life doesn't emerge from a single peak experience but from the patient, playful return to mountains across time. This framework honors seasonal rhythms, body changes, and life phases as integral to mountain wisdom rather than obstacles to overcome. Your relationship with mountains evolves as you do.
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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