Creating a ritualized habit of noticing, questioning, and collecting one meaningful item daily as a meditation on attentiveness and joy.
The examined life requires practice. For collectors, this means developing daily rituals of noticing. Following the Hodja's tradition of playful inquiry, we might collect one item each day—not obsessively, but mindfully. A pebble that catches light. A leaf with an unusual shape. A piece of discarded packaging with interesting typography. This daily practice trains attention, the foundation of both joy and wisdom. Each item becomes a prompt for reflection: Why did I notice this? What does it remind me of? The Hodja would recognize this as a form of meditation disguised as play. Rather than clearing the mind through sitting, we clear it through careful observation. Our collection becomes a chronicle of attention, a physical record of what moved us, what surprised us, what made us curious. Over time, the collection reflects not just objects, but the arc of our examined engagement with the world.
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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