Collections reflect the collector's inner landscape; examining what you gather reveals truths about how you see and play in the world.
Hodja tales frequently turn the mirror back on the questioner, revealing that what we seek outside ourselves often dwells within. A personal collection becomes autobiography written in objects. Your choices—whether you gather vintage maps, ceramic vessels, or botanical illustrations—map your interior landscape. This practice asks collectors to study their own collections as mirrors of consciousness: What patterns emerge? What contradictions live together? What does your gathering reveal about how you perceive beauty, history, and meaning? The Hodja's examined joyful life insists on self-knowledge through play. Rather than collecting to impress or complete a checklist, the mirror collection approach makes collecting a form of self-inquiry. Each acquisition becomes a question: Why do I want this? What does it say about how I'm choosing to play with and engage the world? The collection becomes a portrait of your particular way of seeing.
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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