Understanding that animals' refusal to conform to your will often contains important knowledge about boundaries and authenticity.
When your animal refuses to obey, refuses to perform, refuses to adapt to your expectations, the Hodja invites a different interpretation than 'disobedience.' Perhaps this is integrity. Perhaps your animal is teaching you about authentic being—the refusal to become what you need it to be. A cat will not be trained like a dog; it maintains its nature regardless of your wishes. A horse will not move forward if it senses danger, no matter how firmly you direct it. A bird will not sing on schedule because you desire it. This stubborn refusal to be molded is not a flaw but a teaching: some things cannot and should not be controlled. The Hodja's paradox is that your animal's refusal to obey perfectly might be its greatest gift. It teaches you the limits of will, the existence of otherness you cannot dissolve, the possibility of boundaries that are healthy not selfish. By resisting the urge to train this stubbornness out of your animal, you honor something crucial in existence itself—the right to be oneself, even in relationship, even in dependency.
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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