What I Have Learned Since Earning My Therapeutic Art Certification
Many nurses focus care efforts on everyone but themselves.
They often give so much that they have nothing left for their own wellness.
We spend 12 hours organizing, planning, calculating, documenting, talking, explaining, teaching, convincing, critically evaluating, medicating, lifting, bending, turning, etc. on repeat.
On top of this, we don’t take our breaks because we want to get our charting finished and not get behind.
It is common for us to leave our shifts feeling drained, exhausted, angry, overwhelmed, and maybe even depressed.
Now, incorporate COVID-19 and additional mandates and regulations. It is evident that many nurses are reaching a breaking point and leaving the profession; we are continuously dealing with insurmountable stress.
Since having my therapeutic art certification, I have learned that I am not alone.
With time, I was able to deal with my anxiety and stress through painting and to be truthful, it has saved my life.
I started painting my walls, then furniture and eventually found fluid art or acrylic pour painting.
Fluid art uses paint that has been thinned with a flow medium, allowing it to move on the canvas easily. It also allows you to layer colors without them completely mixing.
The question is, “how can this release stress and serve as a method for personal healing?”
Let me explain.
First, one must acknowledge the emotions or circumstances in which they wish to represent on the canvas through color selection.
The colors are chosen based on how the person feels from each color rather than utilizing the traditional color theory. Why?
People identify and attach personal meaning to colors based on their own experiences.
For example, red may signify love and the happiness that follows for one person but remind another of rage.
The emotion that needs to be removed or healed is painted onto the canvas in order to acknowledge and accept it.
Following, colors that represent how one wants to feel are then layered into a cup and poured over the colors that represent those that the person wishes to remove or heal.
This process provides a visual, meditative experience and creates new neural pathways that allow for now positive associations rather than negative. It has been one of my favorite exercises to coach since receiving my therapeutic art certification.
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