Collecting by inverting normal collection logic—gathering what others discard, valuing failure, celebrating incompleteness.
Nasreddin Hodja often achieved wisdom by doing the opposite of what sense dictated, demonstrating that conventional logic frequently obscures truth. In collecting as play, backwards logic means deliberately collecting items society deems worthless: broken pieces, outdated technologies, failed experiments, incomplete sets. This inverted approach liberates collecting from the tyranny of completion and perfection. Rather than hunting a complete collection of rare stamps, collect the stamps nobody wants. Instead of pristine first editions, gather books with marginalia and dog-eared pages. The joy emerges from rehabilitating the discarded, finding beauty in what was overlooked. This practice embodies the examined joyful life by forcing us to question our inherited values and assumptions about worth. Backwards collecting becomes a playful rebellion against consumerist perfection, proving that a collection of 'failures' can teach us more about ourselves than any curated masterpiece ever could.
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