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The Stranger's Eyes: Defamiliarization Practice

Deliberately seeing familiar places and routines through an outsider's perspective, using the Hodja's outsider-wisdom to restore wonder to overlooked everyday moments.

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Why It Matters

The Hodja often arrives as a stranger to situations, seeing obvious things others have stopped noticing. The examined vacation employs defamiliarization—deliberately practicing strange seeing of familiar elements. If vacationing at home or returning to known places, spend time noticing as if visiting for the first time: How light falls on streets you know, what human stories the architecture contains, what rhythms pattern daily life you usually race through. This practice applies the outsider's wisdom even when you're not traveling far. The Hodja teaches that familiarity blinds us, that the exotic isn't necessarily distant. The examined vacation restores sense of discovery by recovering beginner's mind toward the ordinary. This framework transforms any location into genuine travel territory, revealing that you don't need to journey far to find foreignness—you need only to truly see what you've stopped looking at. Defamiliarization rescues the overlooked beauty waiting in your everyday life.

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