When the Work Feels True

Objects of Devotion and the Joy of Making

Yesterday, I received a note from a student in The Keeper of Fragments workshop. She wrote not to complete an assignment, but because something had shifted for her—and she wanted to share it.

She said this:

“Instead of asking is this good, ask is this true?
This really spoke to me… it stopped me in my tracks.”

That moment is at the heart of what I’ve been exploring with Objects of Devotion.

We are so often trained to measure our work by its “goodness.”Is it skillful enough? Finished enough? Worthy enough? But what happens when we ask a different question?

Is it true?True to our experience, true to what we noticed, true to the pull that made us pick up that fragment in the first place.

Vera went on to say that she returned to a piece she had abandoned months ago—caught in the familiar loop of “Is this good enough?”

This time, something had changed. She finished it not with a sense of technical triumph, but with something deeper:

“Not so much the skill in execution but what it meant to me and how I expressed that.”

That is the moment when an object becomes more than an object.

It becomes a devotional act. Thank you, Vera, for this affirmation!


Devotion Through Making

When I began this series on objects of devotion, I wasn’t thinking about perfection or product. I was thinking about the human impulse to make something with care.

  • To gather fragments.
    To shape a face.
    To wrap, layer, and assemble pieces of meaning.

We use our hands not just to construct, but to acknowledge something:

  • That we are here.
    That we notice.
    That we care.

In that sense, these works are not simply items for a shelf or a shop.

They are tangible manifestations of joy, of attention, of gratitude for being creative, meaning-making humans!


When the Pupil Is Ready

Vera ended her note with a line that made me smile:

“The pupil was ready and the teacher showed up!”

But I think what really happened is something even more profound.

  • The work showed up.
    The truth showed up.
    And she was ready to meet it.

A Thought on On “Unfinished” Work

I’ve come to trust unfinished pieces. They hold a presence that completed work can sometimes lose. We’re quick to decide: it’s not working.
So we fix it, push it, resolve it—or set it aside with disappointment.

But what if “unfinished” isn’t a problem? What if it’s a form of listening?

These pieces—like my three “unfinished” ones shown below—still carry something intact for me. Not polished, not resolved, but true. The gesture is there. The intention is there. The feeling that brought them into being hasn’t been overworked or explained away.

They are already objects of devotion.

Not because they are complete, but because they were made with attention and care—because I followed something meaningful.

Sometimes the most respectful choice is not to finish them.

Keep them nearby.
Let them be.
Let time enter the process.

They may call you back. They may remain as they are. Either way, they are not failures. They are evidence that you showed up, paid attention, and made something true in that moment. And that is enough.

If you’re working on something right now—something unfinished, uncertain, maybe even abandoned—I’ll pass along the same invitation:

Instead of asking is this good,
ask is this true?

Then see what happens when you trust the answer.

___________________________

If you’d like to explore this idea more deeply, The Keeper of Fragments is the first workshop in my Objects of Devotion series. It’s self-paced, and you can begin wherever you are.

And if you do, I’d love to hear what you discover. ~~ Lyn

11 thoughts on “When the Work Feels True

    • Hi, Barb,
      I’m doing them one at a time, one every month, so each class will be $27 when it comes out. With any luck, I’ll live long enough to finish twelve months and twelve classes! LOL ♥♥ But I’ll let you know when the new ones are ready. the next one will be ready in late May.

  1. Also I am taking a unexpected unplanned deal dealing with a health issue calling an eating disorder at age 77 anyway I wanna sign up for all of the classes because I’m doing art, but I’m not teaching and I don’t have a lot of energy to do big art projects and these look just like wonderful little ways to stay engaged, so I’m asking how can I let my students who are anxiously awaiting for me to start teaching again know about your classes and I also sent you a comment about wanting to sign up for all of them and when can I begin taking a big breath?

  2. Is this true! Lyn I had just asked myself this re my piece I am working on for the Enso circle and this shows up!! It clarified my answer and made me reflect on what it has been that I give up so easily on works and abandon them. Another piece I was painting was looked at by an art teacher who pushed me to add more to an area I was scared to “mess up”. I added more and now I am excited to see what happens next to the piece, it transformed it and connected the areas of the work together. “Is this true” to me yes most definitely and now another part of me is ready to let go of the fear of being judged and just do it anyway!
    I am astounded by your words that arrive just as I am ready to receive!! Thanks Lyn and that first piece above that reminds me of a storybook character with their collar up and hands in pockets I just think it’s perfect in its simplicity. Even the eyes seem like they too agree.

    • Marian, I have always said we are on the same wavelength! Your interpretation of that piece as a storybook character is delightful – you are so good at storytelling!!
      I think you should be telling stories about your bees when you were growing up. ♥

  3. Im a bit behind but this is so timely…I just unpacked 6 -7 unfinished pieces to complete for an upcoming show…most were a total mess…and I took them apart. With the ones left, I will now revisit with fresh eyes and thinking. Thank you!

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