Deliberately collect items with zero market value or utility, making worthlessness itself the primary criterion for inclusion and honoring useless joy.
Nasreddin Hodja's world is populated by ordinary people doing ordinary things—rarely valuable by conventional measures. Worthlessness as Selection Criterion inverts collecting logic entirely: explicitly seek items with no resale value, no utility, no social currency. A bent paperclip, a dried leaf, a chipped tile, a broken pen—items that no collector wants and no market values. This practice embodies profound playfulness: you're collecting against every capitalist logic that normally governs acquisition. There's no investment thesis, no status gain, no practical purpose. You're gathering purely for joy, meaning, and attention. This framework liberates collectors from the tyranny of value. It honors the examined joyful life by asking: what brings genuine pleasure? What deserves attention? What does my soul want to dwell upon? By intentionally selecting worthless things, you're making a philosophical statement about what truly matters. You're declaring that meaning isn't purchased but created through attention, that joy doesn't require prestige, and that play means liberation from external measures of worth.
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