Instead of collecting objects, collect the questions they provoke, building a library of productive uncertainties.
The Hodja's tradition is fundamentally rooted in questions—his stories typically end with paradoxes that invite contemplation rather than resolve. The Question Collection Method shifts the focus from the object to the inquiries it generates. When you encounter something worth collecting, you collect not the item but the questions it raises. Why does this button exist? Who held this handwritten letter? What story made this book's spine break at precisely this page? Over time, your collection becomes an archive of productive uncertainties rather than false certainties. This practice exemplifies collecting as play because the joy comes from inquiry itself, not possession. The examined joyful life demands that we remain curious, and this method institutionalizes curiosity. A collection of questions is infinitely expandable, never complete, always generative. It protects you from the collector's trap of feeling that completion is possible. Instead, you're building a monument to the inexhaustible mystery of the world. Each object becomes a portal to deeper unknowing, and the collection becomes a celebration of everything we can never fully comprehend.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.