How It Works
Much of stress and trauma is stored non-verbally, in our visual and physical memory. By activating the non-verbal, right brain, drawing:
facilitates self-expression that is language independent, using shape, color and texture to represent experience
promotes memory retrieval, integration, and consolidation, all of which are disrupted by stress/trauma
places the content outside of ourselves, giving space to process
facilitates building connections between things, promoting problem solving and understanding
employs visual, tactile and repetitive muscular activity
can connect us to our present reality and environment
by-passes language/vocabulary barriers
How to Use
Start by drawing something simple - shapes, lines, colors. Draw things around you or draw from your imagination. Trace your hand or objects. Draw your feelings. When you are ready, draw your story.
When to Use - Signs of Stress/Trauma
not talking, not answering questions
disconnected: staring blankly into space; immobilized - not moving
preoccupied, worried, overwhelmed
anxious, panicked, agitated
What It Can Do
decrease anxiety, distress; feel calmer
increase control over feelings (self-regulation)
think more clearly; increased concentration & problem solving
improve compliance: ability to hear and follow directions
reconnect to self and present moment
increase interaction with people and environment