Using Nasreddin's humor to examine spring's deceptive promises and the farmer's recurring temptation to plant too early or expect too much.
Spring awakens hope and urgency in farmers, yet Nasreddin teaches that this very excitement can blind us to reality. Like his story of planting gold coins expecting to harvest gold, eager farmers often misread spring's signals, sowing seeds into unprepared soil or frost-threatened days. This concept invites farmers to recognize spring's trickster nature—its beauty masks lingering danger. Nasreddin's humor serves as a truth-telling mirror: by laughing at the fool who plants in spring snow, we recognize ourselves. The seasonal calendar becomes not a calendar to follow blindly, but a paradoxical guide that teaches caution through desire, wisdom through failure, and true readiness through patient observation. Spring's foolishness, when examined closely, becomes the teacher of genuine spring readiness.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.