A practice of curating by subtraction rather than accumulation, discovering what stories remain when you remove rather than add.
The Hodja teaches through reversal and inversion—he often solves problems by approaching them from unexpected directions. Collecting Backwards applies this by starting with a full collection and systematically removing items, asking what remains essential and why. This inverts the typical collector's anxiety about missing pieces. Instead of asking "what else should I have," you ask "what cannot I live without?" Each removal becomes a small revelation about authentic preference versus social expectation. This practice transforms collecting from consumption into archaeology of self. You discover that some items held sentimental weight you'd forgotten, while others vanished from your consciousness the moment they left your shelf. The Hodja's humor emerges here: we often keep what we've forgotten, and forget what we're keeping. Playing with subtraction reveals the true nature of our attachments.
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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