Store collections seasonally so items cycle in and out, renewing appreciation and preventing stagnation.
The Hodja's wisdom often emerges through cycles—seasons change, perspectives shift, understanding deepens with time. Applied to collecting, rotation practice means storing portions of your collection away seasonally, then rotating what's visible. This prevents items from disappearing into the background through constant exposure. When something returns after months away, you see it fresh. This practice naturally prevents unlimited growth because storage space becomes a natural constraint. It creates rhythm in collecting that mirrors natural cycles. It allows genuine rediscovery—items you forgot you loved return to delight you. Play emerges in the curation required: what deserves visible space this season? What needs to rest? This approach honors the Hodja's insight that perspective and timing matter enormously. It keeps collections dynamic and alive rather than static. The practice transforms collecting from permanent display into flowing engagement.
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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