Pets offer no economic productivity, yet they enrich life immeasurably—a paradox the Hodja understands as a gateway to true value.
Nasreddin Hodja often appears in stories where practical usefulness dissolves into absurdity or reveals hidden meaning. Companion animals perfectly embody this paradox: they generate no income, solve no material problems, yet profoundly transform human existence. A bird's song cannot be quantified; a cat's presence cannot be justified by productivity metrics. This concept examines how our relationships with pets naturally teach us to value what cannot be measured or monetized. In a world that obsessively calculates worth through utility, companion animals insist on a different economy—the economy of presence, attention, and unconditional relationship. The Hodja would recognize this as wisdom disguised as foolishness: we keep creatures who 'do nothing,' yet through them we learn about love, mortality, joy, and meaning. This challenges our deepest assumptions about value. By stewarding these useless beautiful beings, we practice a form of resistance to purely instrumental thinking. They teach us that the examined joyful life includes dimensions that transcend economic rationality.
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