Creating deliberate moments of transition within celebrations to honor passage between states and seasons.
Hodja often found himself at thresholds—between wisdom and foolishness, action and inaction, arriving and departing. Festivals themselves are thresholds: transitions between ordinary time and celebration, between one year and the next, between who we were and who we're becoming. This concept creates explicit ceremony at these liminal moments. Light a specific candle when celebration begins; perform a ritual at the moment of transition from feasting to reflection; create a formal threshold-crossing at the end. Many traditions understood this: the breaking of glass, the first star sighting, the final bell. These moments acknowledge that passages require attention and intention. They honor what's being left behind and what's being entered. For the examined joyful life, thresholds matter because consciousness lives there—in the space between states. Festivals that mark thresholds consciously create genuine transition rather than abrupt jarring. Hodja teaches that liminal space is where wisdom lives; festivals should dwell there deliberately.
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