Nasreddin's paradoxical wisdom that the highest peaks reveal what lies beneath, teaching that elevation and depth are inseparable in understanding ourselves.
The Upside-Down Mountain inverts our expectation that height means distance from truth. Nasreddin teaches that climbing reveals what we thought was behind us—our foundations, our shadows, our forgotten selves. In the tradition of the Hodja, ascent becomes a mirror for descent into self-knowledge. When we reach high places, we discover that the mountain's summit reflects the valley's floor. This concept transforms how we approach mountains not as escapes from the world but as instruments of honest self-examination. The examined joyful life requires this paradox: to know ourselves fully, we must climb while simultaneously looking inward, treating elevation as an occasion for humble reflection rather than triumphant achievement.
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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