A paradoxical practice of inverting expectations about what plants need, revealing hidden assumptions in how we tend them.
Nasreddin Hodja's genius lies in turning situations inside-out to expose deeper truths. In gardening, this means questioning every conventional wisdom: perhaps the 'weeds' feed the soil better than our chosen plants, or neglect teaches resilience we cannot cultivate through care. The examined relationship with plants begins when we stop assuming we know what serves them. By playfully inverting our gardening rules—planting in patterns that seem wrong, watering according to what feels counterintuitive, trusting chaos over order—we discover that nature operates by its own logic, not ours. This practice humbles the gardener and transforms the garden into a teacher rather than a project. When we examine what happens when we do the opposite of what we're told, we learn to listen to the actual plants before us rather than to our inherited beliefs about them.
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