A festival practice welcoming genuine strangers and disruptions as teachers, embodying Hodja's principle that wisdom arrives through surprise.
Nasreddin Hodja frequently encounters strangers who teach him through their very unexpectedness. The Unexpected Guest Protocol formalizes this into festival practice: intentionally create space for the genuinely unknown to arrive—an unplanned participant, an interruption, an uninvited presence that forces improvisation. Rather than treating disruption as failure, this practice treats it as curriculum. The stranger arrives not as problem but as gift, the interruption not as chaos but as teaching. This embodies Hodja's insight that rigidity blinds us while flexibility opens sight. Festivals following this protocol become alive and adaptive rather than scripted. When something unforeseen occurs—a guest arrives late with a strange story, weather forces plan changes, a performer improvises wildly—the community practices the examined joyful life by responding with curiosity instead of frustration. Wisdom flourishes where control releases and genuine encounter becomes possible.
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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