Nasreddin's famous donkey represents the absurd, irrational aspects of ourselves that collecting reveals—teaching us to observe our own foolishness with humor rather than judgment.
In countless Nasreddin tales, his donkey embodies stubborn illogic, infinite appetite, and the body's refusal to cooperate with reason. As collectors, we often encounter our own 'donkey nature'—the impulse to gather beyond necessity, to hoard items whose purpose we've forgotten, to seek completion through accumulation. Rather than shame ourselves for this behavior, Nasreddin invites us to recognize it with compassionate humor. Our collecting impulses reveal truths about desire, memory, and mortality that deserve examination rather than suppression. By treating our accumulating tendencies as a mirror—funny, instructive, fundamentally human—we develop the emotional resilience to collect consciously. This framework transforms collecting from a symptom of lack into a joyful practice of self-knowledge, where each gathered object becomes a koan about what we truly value.
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