Deliberately setting boundaries on your collection to preserve its vitality and to question what collecting ultimately cannot achieve.
Most collections expand endlessly, governed only by obsession or space. Hodja's tradition invites a different approach: intentional limits. You might decide to collect only ten objects, or only items smaller than your hand, or only things acquired in a particular year. These boundaries seem arbitrary until you live with them. Then you discover they transform everything. Limits force real choices; every new item requires removing something. This creates necessary sacrifice, turning collection into moral and aesthetic practice. Limits also reveal what collection ultimately cannot do. Even a perfectly bounded collection cannot complete you, cannot answer final questions, cannot provide security. By accepting boundaries, you acknowledge this openly. The collection then becomes not a desperate attempt to possess or understand everything, but a modest, honest engagement with beauty and meaning. Hodja valued this kind of humble recognition—that wisdom lies partly in accepting limits rather than transgressing them. Your bounded collection becomes a meditation on finitude. The play deepens because you're now collecting against the culture's expansion imperative. You're asserting that less can be more, that boundaries can liberate, that saying no is as creative as saying yes. The examined joyful life often requires this kind of disciplined freedom.
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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