Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Sideways Approach

Achieving goals through indirect, unexpected paths rather than frontal assault, learning from how nature solves problems through indirection.

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Why It Matters

Nasreddin rarely solves problems directly. He approaches them obliquely, sideways, sometimes backwards—and often arrives at solutions that direct effort would never find. The Sideways Approach reflects how rivers carve canyons and how roots find water: not through force but through persistence in unexpected directions. In the examined natural life, we're conditioned to believe direct action is most efficient, yet observation of nature reveals that indirection often succeeds where force fails. This concept teaches flexibility, patience, and trust in non-obvious paths. When Nasreddin needs to move a boulder, he doesn't strain against it but finds a lever, an angle, a time. Applied practically, this means examining what's blocking you from an unusual angle, questioning whether your goal itself needs reframing, and trusting that the winding path may reach truth more surely than the straight one. This mirrors natural systems where circuitous paths prove most sustainable.

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