Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Well That Never Empties

The paradox of regenerative land—that giving sustains rather than depletes—echoes Nasreddin's inexplicable reversals and joyful abundance.

Nas
Why It Matters

Several Nasreddin tales involve impossible abundance: the well that never empties, the purse that remains full despite withdrawal. These are not fantasies but pointers to actual ecological truth: living systems regenerate when worked with their nature, not against it. Indigenous land management created abundance through practices that increased diversity and resilience. Modern extraction creates scarcity through monoculture and depletion. Sacred land practice means learning the practices and postures that align with regeneration: crop rotation, polyculture, water conservation, soil building, habitat creation. These are not restrictions but invitations to participate in the land's own generative capacity. The well never empties when we take only what we need and return what we can. The Hodja's impossible abundance is actually the normal state of living systems that haven't been disrupted by extraction. This concept invites us to stop treating the land as depleting resource and start treating it as regenerating partner.

Helpful guides
Nas
Play & Joy
Peri
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