Celebrate items that serve no practical purpose, revealing how play and beauty constitute their own worthy reasons for collecting.
Nasreddin Hodja delighted in exploring life's uselessness—his famous ride backwards on a donkey, his paradoxical advice—teaching that purpose isn't always practical. Collecting as play invites us to gather objects purely for aesthetic joy, historical intrigue, or philosophical interest. A smooth stone, a peculiar button, an obsolete tool—these useless treasures paradoxically hold immense value. This inquiry challenges the utilitarian mindset that infiltrates even our leisure activities. By defending the useless object, we reclaim play as a legitimate human activity requiring no justification beyond joy. The examined life flourishes here, where we articulate why something matters despite its impracticality. This practice connects to nature's own uselessness: flowers bloom without purpose beyond beauty, birds sing without utility. The Hodja's humor emerges in our earnest defense of collecting things that serve absolutely nothing, discovering freedom in that very purposelessness.
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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