The Intersections of Art & Wellbeing: Clarity, Imagination & Connection

Artmaking has been with me since I was a child. But it was while I was doing my visual arts degree in uni that I found art to be the place where I can articulate the unseen parts of who I was. Parts that I didn’t have language for.

I remember having a project where we needed to visually represent a song, and my choice was ‘What if God was one of us’ by Joan Osbourne. No one really knew it where I was growing up – which probably made it even more appealing for me – but it asked questions I was exploring.

And I remember my tutor at the time looking at my images, and just as I was about to explain them to him, he said ‘I know exactly what you’re trying to say here’.  And that moment stuck with me because I was so clear about my experience, that he saw it too. It was undeniable and non-negotiable.

I realised art is where I meet myself. It’s where I meet all of my selves.

Through art-making I was able to honestly listen to what this moment demands of me. To listen deeply on a physical, emotional and spiritual level.
It’s this clarity that I chase in the art-making process. 

Not everything I create and communicate will be beautiful, in the literal sense, because not everything I experience is beautiful. If anything, I find the art therapy process to be expansive in how it acknowledges our complexities, our nuances and how it holds space for those parts of us to breathe. 

I love Coldplay’s lyric ‘I’d rather be a comma than a full stop’, because it acknowledges the transitions, to who I’m becoming in any given moment. Seeking clarity about who we are in any given moment has become an important intention of mine in the work I do with others.

The way I see it:

When you gain a clearer sense of self  >  you can state what you’re experiencing  >  you can state what you need  >  you can re-imagine what you need to create and live a fuller life.


Imagination is not inconsequential.
It shapes movements. It shapes wars. It shapes economies. It shapes how we meet in the digital world. 

It’s the creative act of constructing a different way of being. We are now - as adrienne maree brown powerfully states - living in someone else’s imagination, in other people’s creative acts - constructive or destructive. Imagination requires hard work, an acknowledgment of what might be - and what might not be - possible. But I find it so important in working towards our wellbeing.

When we reimagine a self that is closer to who we want to be in the world, and reclaim what was once consumed by shame or guilt and that is one of the biggest leaps towards bringing healing into our spaces. I say space-S, because something I realised was that our healing isn’t just about ourselves.

People always ask me ‘Why do you focus so much on relationships?’ 
And my answer is: Our healing is connected to the healing of others.

My healing is connected to the healing of my parents and my grandparents. The healing of a marriage is connected to the healing of each partner. The healing of a community is connected to the healing of its leaders, it’s community workers and individuals.  

When we imagine what healing, clarity and wholeness is possible for ourselves, we can imagine what healing, clarity and wholeness is possible in our partnerships, our families, our friendships, and communities. Our internal health is linked to the externalWhen we strengthen ourselves and our communities, we would be better equipped to tackle unhealthy existing structures and systems.

In my experience, art: the visual, the spoken, the written, the performed, 

  • is a means to get these moments of clarity about what we might need for our healing, 

  • to help us move towards reimagining the relationships we want with ourselves

  • and to reimagine our connections with others and with the collective systems we’re in.


That’s what I’m hoping to bring to the table…

Our Healing is Connected

I was recently asked why I always bring my work back to relationships. And well... how can I not?

Our healing isn’t just about ourselves.

Our healing is connected to the healing of others.


How we relate to others is a reflection of how we relate to ourselves. When you imagine what healing, clarity and wholeness is possible for yourself, you’ll have a better idea on what healing, clarity and wholeness is possible in your partnerships, your family, your friends, and your communities.

This might seem more evident when we talk about intergenerational healing, such as with a parent with their child. But these patterns, behaviours, triggers, thoughts and wounds also extend to relationships with family, partners, workspaces, organisations and belief systems.

Apart from the immediate impact, I also strongly believe how we relate to each other has an impact on a global scale. So much about the state of the world today and the policies in place that govern us are about how we were taught to relate to the other, how to perceive those we believe might be different to us, how much space we believe we can take and what rights we believe we have over others.

Our healing is connected to the healing of others.

To Speak The Words You Speak

It’s important to me that I don’t rephrase or sugarcoat what a participant tells me in a session.⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀
When a participant shared with me ‘I bear all the crap’, I made sure I spoke back those exact words loud enough for him to hear. It wasn’t ‘I carry the load’ or ‘I’m feeling burdened.’

No, listen. – I.Bear.All.The.Crap.


As soon as I attempt to change your words, to soften your words, to make them more ‘suitable’, I lose sight of you. I give the impression ‘you shouldn’t feel what you’re feeling’, or ‘you don’t know the extent of what you’re feeling’. Or ‘I can’t handle how you’re feeling.’⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀
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My promise is to speak the words you speak and make you hear that I hear you. ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀
We will taste these words, let them tongue meaning and find new language in our presence.⠀⠀

A Brick to Our Miseducation

The deeper I engage with Art Therapy, the stronger I feel about its place within advocacy and activism.
So how can I not use it as such?

  • Every story we penetrate about who we are - or who we’re told we are - is a brick to the miseducation we’ve received about our ‘role’ and our ’place’.

  • Every opportunity of ‘not knowing’ is a new self that can breathe in a system that chokes us into boxes and bottom-lines.

  • Every reminder of something we once housed within us is an act of preservation.

  • Every moment we slow down and reclaim from the fast-paced structures we’re set in is a chance for regeneration and transformation.

  • Every rising sense in our body that we move towards, is a resistance to the numbing fleetness of the everyday.

  • Every seeded curiosity about our next step can be a toxic cycle broken.


So how can I not use it as such?

In the Spaces of Shame & Guilt

Reclaiming a space once consumed by shame or guilt is one of the biggest leaps into reimagining a self that aligns with how you want to be in the world.

To resolve conflict.⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀
To rebuild a relationship.⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀
To repair self-talk.⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀
To show yourself to those closest to you.
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As part of a teaching demo by my tutors, I revealed the inner works of a relationship so intimate to a room full of colleagues. I knew when I volunteered that I needed to set the shame, guilt, and concerns of 'people talk' that riddled my thoughts aside.
'What will they say about me? What will they think about my relationship? About the 'other' in the relationship? About my upbringing? About my culture?’

It was a shaky moment stepping into full view so willingly, but it was necessary and memorable. As I stepped into the spotlight I also stepped into a strength I didn't know I had at the time.⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀

My desire to deconstruct and reimagine this relationship had become far more amplified than any concerns that had previously suffocated the relationship from breathing and thriving. And bullied me from doing the same.

'And the day came when the risk to remain tight in a bud was more painful than the risk it took to blossom.' - Anais Nin


What might grow for you in the spaces taken over by guilt and shame?⠀

Receiving Touch

To find and to receive touch as a form of nourishment against the mindlessness, the carelessness and the neglect we impose on our body is no ordinary find.

I neglected my body. I ignored my body. I was careless with my body.
I tried to fit it into the narrowness that I was made to believe about myself. The contours of my body altered as it was caving in. I held so much within me, yet my body was hollow.

I always had what it took to offer my body to others - in service, in love, in work, in presence. But I didn't have it in me to offer it what it needed. 'I can't nourish you at this moment' was a dialog that lasted for months.

And yet, something in me knew I needed to seek touch. A kind other than what I was allowing it. Something to trigger the senses back into connection. Something to remind me, to confront myself, to make me fall back into this being as a whole, and not as severed parts.

A vigorous massage.
A bloodied piercing - even pain can feel glorious to a numbed-out body.
A friend quietly finding possibility within the wounds through henna.

Your whole body is voice. Find someone who can find that voice in the moments you can't.

Re-introducing Ourselves

‘The most memorable part was seeing a deeper side to my friends.’
- Group participant K.


I've been facilitating groups in varying contexts for close to 8 years now. It has always been a teacher to me to listen better, ask more, see wider, and look closely.

There is room for POSSIBILITY - hearing how others cope with the issues you might be facing.
There is room for NUANCE - addressing the complexities and contradictions in each of us.
There is room for IMAGINATION - as you rework your behaviours before taking it into the world.
There is room to LEARN from others - as there is room to contribute to their learning.
There is room to RECEIVE support - from those witnessing your journey to becoming closer to who you want to be.

In an atmosphere built towards safety, kindness and non-judgement, it also made clear to me the second-chances deep group work offers us in re-introducing ourselves to our own worlds and those in it. Strangers and loved ones alike.