Finding profound insights about attention, presence, and nature hidden within seemingly illogical or silly observations.
Hodja often speaks sense while sounding senseless—or senselessness that contains hidden truth. In birdwatching, this manifests as noticing 'useless' details: the exact angle of a wing, the quality of silence before a dawn chorus, the way light catches an eye. Ornithological field guides ignore these observations; they seem impractical. Yet they are precisely what awakens presence. When you stop categorizing and start noticing the absurd, poignant, or weird particulars—the pigeon with an odd gait, the repeated call pattern that seems pointless—you access something deeper than identification. Hodja teaches that wisdom often arrives disguised as foolishness, that the apparently irrelevant detail holds the key. Birdwatching practiced this way becomes a discipline of noticing what makes no 'sense' but carries profound meaning: the examined joyful life found in seemingly inconsequential moments of attention.
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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