Fragment 4 — The Day I Stopped Correcting
There was a day I noticed something strange.
My hands were still moving,
but my mind was no longer trying to fix.
No checklist.
No mental image of what the surface should become.
Just the object in front of me.
Until then, correcting felt responsible.
Smoothing here.
Adjusting there.
Erasing what didn’t match the intention.
Control looked like care.
But slowly, correction became noise.
Every time I intervened,
the material lost a little of its voice.
That day, I paused.
I didn’t decide to stop correcting.
I simply didn’t know what to correct anymore.
The surface wasn’t wrong.
It was just… there.
Uneven.
Honest.
Still becoming.
So I stepped back.
Not out of confidence.
Out of restraint.
The object didn’t collapse.
It didn’t become chaotic.
It settled.
By giving up control,
I didn’t lose direction —
I gained attention.
The form no longer needed to be managed.
It needed to be witnessed.
That was the day I understood:
correction is not always improvement.
Sometimes,
it’s interruption.
This text is part of the ongoing Hors Series — Fragments of Matter,
a space dedicated to material, process, and what happens in between.
