On healing and art-making
You might know exactly what happened and still feel frozen, overwhelmed, disconnected, restless, or emotionally flooded. Insight matters and is necessary at times, but healing sometimes asks for a somatic experience.
Creative work can help us access parts of experience that sit outside linear conversation, and live in our bodies. Using your hands to paint, draw, collage, or create can support nervous system regulation, emotional processing, and deeper self-contact. The tactile experience of making something can help slow racing thoughts, ground the body, and create space for emotions that are difficult to name.
Art-making in therapy can be especially supportive for clients navigating trauma, grief, anxiety, life transitions, perfectionism, or emotional disconnection.
This isn’t about being “good at art.” It’s about expression, sensation, symbolism, curiosity, and giving shape to what may not yet have words. When appropriate, creative interventions may be thoughtfully integrated into our work together as one pathway toward healing.
Research on the therapeutic benefits of art-making
Art for Trauma, PTSD, and Reclaiming Safety in the Body
Art for Depression in Elderly Women
Art for Depression and Fatigue in Cancer Patients