Art As Meditation

Meditative Painting by Maureen Nadeau

The Challenge: We all have moments when we feel overwhelmed by our emotions.
The Science: Creating art leads to surprising benefits for body and mind.
The Solution: Make time for creativity to significantly improve your life!-Let me be your guidešŸ’•

How art making can give us the same results as mediation.

Many of us have heard about the benefits of meditation, but sometimes find it hard to do. Sitting in stillness is not for everyone!

Fewer of us know about the profound benefits of artistic expression. Creating art, however, is another way to access a meditative state of mind and the profound healing it brings. 

ā€œArt is a guarantee to sanity,ā€ said Louise Bourgeois, a French-American artist who died in 2010 at the age of 98. She even went on to add, ā€œ(…) this is the most important thing I have said.ā€ For Bourgeois, Art — making Art ā€” was a tool for coping with overwhelming emotion. She says she remembers making small sculptures out of bread crumbs at the dinner table when she was a little girl – as a way of dealing with her dominating father. Art was more than an escape – it kept her sane.

Art therapy has a healing effect for a variety of ailments (depression, trauma, illness, etc.) and is effective across age, gender or ethnicity. In a recent study performed on cancer patients, an art therapy intervention — in conjunction with conventional treatments —(chemotherapy, radiation, surgery etc.) not only diminished symptoms typically associated with cancer such as pain, fatigue, anxiety, but also enhanced life expectancy. The study was based on the belief that ā€œthe creative process involved in the making of art is healing and life enhancing. It is used to help patients, or their families, increase awareness of self, cope with symptoms, and adapt to stressful and traumatic experiences.ā€ 

Art is not only healing for individuals suffering from severe illness. Here are 

3 reasons why creative activity is such a potent recipe for psychological well-being:

1. Art is a vehicle for meditation and self-connection

Most of us can understand that art provides an escape to a sometimes harsh reality, but where does art’s healing potential come from? It impacts the state of our mind: enjoying emotional stability is largely about taking responsibility for how we feel.

Research has shown the power of meditation and the science behind it. One of the reasons it is so powerful is that it fosters acceptance: ā€œmeditation is an active training of the mind to increase awareness (…) it emphasizes acceptance of feelings and thoughts without judgment and relaxation of body and mindā€. Creating art is a type of meditation. It allows you to free yourself from daily worries and tensions and connect with deeper parts of yourself.

Moreover, art, like meditation, allows you to create space between ā€˜the thoughts’ and allows us to connect with our true selves – as opposed to with the fleeting/or false sense of identity we can get when we are caught up thoughts and emotions. Eckhart Tolle, spiritual teacher, writes; ā€œIdentification with thoughts and the emotions that go with those thoughts creates a false mind-made sense of self, conditioned by the past… This false self is never happy or fulfilled for long. Its normal state is one of unease, fear, insufficiency, and nonfulfillmentā€. Creating art is about reaching a state of consciousness and breaking free from the constant debilitating chatter of the mind.

2. Art provides a feeling of flow & freedom

Similarly to meditation, art can help us tap into a deeper and more quiet part of ourselves and we enter into a state of flow and present-moment awareness. ā€œAll true artists, whether they know it or not, create from a place of no-mind, from inner stillnessā€. Artists experience that creative activity has the potential to tap into a space of true consciousness of being, void of interpretation. In this space, there can be a sense of having no physical parameters; no body, or form to separate one from the other. 

3. Art allows for true self-expression

The process of making art, overrides the need for verbal communication; creativity is its own language and enables humans to connect with one another — and themselves — on a parallel level than that occupied by the mind, the intellect and words. In therapy it can be an effective way of saying the unspeakable as is shown through the use of creative therapies with children. This also explains how we can be moved to the core when looking at a work of art, or even listening to music, without necessarily knowing specifics about its origin. Art exists within its own non-verbal parameter and thus frees us up for unadultered self-expression.

4. Art helps us become steady & centered

As a plus, it is interesting to note that Bourgeois, when asked to comment on her extensive body of work spanning her entire lifetime, says what impresses her most  ā€œihow constant [I] have been.ā€ Perhaps we need to redefine what we consider to be a storybook happy ending. Happiness may be less a matter of experiencing sharp highs (often followed by deep lows), and more a matter of nurturing a space that provides a constant connection to our true selves. An article published this year by the University of Hertfordshire finds a direct link between self-acceptance and a happier life. It quotes Dr. Mark Williamson — Director of Action for Happiness — who reminds us how, ā€œour society puts huge pressure on us to be successful and to constantly compare ourselves with others [and how] this causes a great deal of unhappiness and anxiety.ā€

Why not use Art, and art-making, as a way to ā€œspend some quiet time by yourself.?

Get Centered and anchor. into. your truth.

Tune in to how you’re feeling inside and try to be at peace with who you are.

Want some guidance on how to get started?

Join me in my monthly live/online creative soul circle!

click HERE for more info and Registration.

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