Shifting the focus from accumulating objects to collecting moments, stories, and relationships that objects anchor and represent.
The Hodja understood that objects are time capsules—each holds the moment of acquisition, the person who gave it, the era it represents. Rather than collecting things, collect the stories they carry. A collecting practice grounded in time means: recording why you chose each item, when you found it, what was happening in your life. It means recognizing that the real value isn't in the object but in the time it preserves and makes present. Nature operates on deep time—trees collect rings, stones collect sediment. Your collection becomes a personal archaeology, a tangible meditation on change and continuity. The examined joyful life asks: what moments matter enough to preserve? By collecting time rather than things, you transform hoarding into memoir-making. Your collection becomes evidence not of consumption but of attention—proof that you noticed, that you paused, that certain moments were worth returning to.
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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