Nasreddin's practice of asking 'what is this mountain for?' to expose unexamined assumptions about purpose and achievement in high places.
A signature Nasreddin move involves asking apparently stupid questions that reveal hidden assumptions. Applied to mountains: Why climb? What does a peak accomplish? What makes a summit worth reaching? These questions aren't meant to stop you from climbing but to expose the narratives you've inherited about mountains—conquest, achievement, transformation, escape. High places invite these narratives powerfully; we bring decades of cultural mythology about peaks and summits. The Hodja's tradition suggests that examining these assumptions is itself the practice, not a barrier to practice. When you ask what a mountain is actually for, you discover that it exists for nothing—and that this uselessness is precisely what makes it valuable. A peak demands nothing from you except presence. This reframes mountains and high places as spaces for shedding purpose-driven thinking entirely. The examined joyful life doesn't pursue meaning at summits; it releases the demand for meaning and finds freedom in purposeless presence.
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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