Collect items nature has abandoned or broken—shells, stones, found wood—treating discards as primary wisdom sources rather than supplements.
Nasreddin Hodja's domain includes nature, and nature itself is the ultimate collector and discarder. Nature creates abundantly then abandons without sentiment. In Collecting as play, this principle invites prioritizing what nature has already rejected: broken shells, weathered stones, fallen branches, shed feathers, abandoned nests. These items carry inherent philosophy—evidence of transformation, decay, cycles, and indifference. Unlike curated museum pieces, nature's discards humble us. They ask: what makes something worthy of keeping? The Hodja tradition honors humble, ordinary nature as profound teacher. By building collections primarily from nature's leftovers, you align with the examined joyful life—finding sufficiency in abundance, beauty in imperfection, and wisdom in things nature deemed insignificant. This practice teaches that collecting's deepest satisfaction arrives not from acquisition but from attention: noticing what was always present, learning to see discarded nature as treasure, and understanding that play means respecting what the world offers freely.
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