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Concept
1 min read

The Mirror Collection Practice

A reflective method where collectors intentionally examine what their collections reveal about their values, fears, and authentic selves, following Hodja's tradition of self-inquiry.

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Why It Matters

Hodja's stories often function as mirrors—listeners discover uncomfortable truths about themselves in his seemingly simple tales. This concept treats your collection as such a mirror. What patterns emerge? Do you collect insurance against loss? Proof of sophistication? Evidence of belonging? Artifacts of a past identity? Do your collections reflect your actual life, or an imagined one? This examined practice invites collectors to interview themselves honestly about their accumulations. A collection of travel souvenirs might reveal wanderlust but also restlessness; a collection of rare books might show intellectual ambition but also anxiety about being 'enough.' Rather than judging these revelations, Hodja's playful approach suggests meeting them with humor and curiosity. The examined collection becomes a psychological portrait, a map of the collector's inner landscape. When collectors engage in this reflective practice regularly, acquisitions become more intentional—you add things that genuinely reflect who you are becoming, not who you feared you were. The collection transforms into a conscious autobiography written in objects.

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