This is a fantastic piece by reader Eve
Robinson, a writer
who approached me through my email- matthewtuckey@hotmail.com. Pic courtesy Ant Smith, Flickr.
So
writing is great, right? Blogging lets you tell the whole world what
you have been up to, where you have been and your thoughts on a whole
range of subjects - from the most important musings on political
leadership to delicious
recipes to try at home. But here’s a question? Can writing
actually be considered to be a type of therapy? Life changing and
enhancing therapy? There is growing body of thought that suggests
that focussed writing groups can help individuals with all kinds of
issues, from depression to anxiety and a number of other medical
ailments, as well as helping some work through the traumas they have
experienced in their lives.
Creative
writing therapy
Along
with these illnesses, creative writing is also thought to help those
that have had or are suffering with addiction issues; issues that are
incredibly complex and may have many reasons at their core. Whilst
concrete research is still relatively thin on the ground from the UK,
the University of Texas in the US has been conducting some
interesting research into this theory. Professor Pennbaker is a
member of the Universities’ Department of Psychology and has spent
much of his time exploring the way that short, focussed writing
sessions can help a whole range of people and that “people
who have powerful secrets are more prone to a variety of health
problems”. He believes that the impact of situations that cause
emotional upheaval can, sometimes, be underestimated, that these
situations can affect all aspects of our lives — our finances, our
relationships with others and how we feel about ourselves. In some
cases a completely unrelated experience can lead people down a much
darker pattern of problems including addiction to drugs, alcohol or
unhealthy behaviour patterns. These may require further professional
therapy in order to resolve them - Recovery.org claims that
"treatments
that can be individually tailored" and take anything from 30
days to three months (or longer) are often successful - depending on
the issues involved. But, whilst Pennbaker doesn’t say that writing
can act as the only therapy he does argues that the process of
writing can help to focus the mind and to help it deal with the
trauma that has been faced. The mind, he argues, likes things to be
ordered, so enabling it to do that through writing is, he believes,
that way forward when dealing with emotion upheavals or traumas.
This
learned professor may just have a very valid point. The Recovery web
site, recoveryview.com,
also looks at this further in a piece entitled “Transforming
Lives and Transforming the World with the Power of Words”. Take
a deeper look at many cultures such as the indigenous tribes in
native America or various western and eastern religious beliefs and
you will find the act of talking about trauma is woven deep within
them. When you have experienced an upheaval or trauma, or you are
ill, anything can help. And it needn’t just be writing, it could be
poetry as well, Recovering Words with Richard Osler aims to
“celebrate
the craft and healing art of poetry".
UK
based researchers have also looked at how writing can aid
professional development and how this reflective practice can improve
life. Gillie Bolton is one of the UK’s leading researchers into
this practice and has written a book about it. A research fellow at
the Sheffield University, Bolton has developed her ideas into
seminars for health and medical professionals, as a way to explore
relationships and work issues. Some health authorities, such as the
Cumbria Health Authority, have even taken up her thoughts and offered
it as a model for individuals looking to “improve
their practice or for personal development”.
Bitesize
- how to apply creative writing to your life
Bolton
believes that the best place to start is to “mind dump”; write
continuously for 6 minutes, about whatever comes into your mind.
Don’t worry about your grammar or spelling, or whether it even
really makes sense, just write. Once you have completed this stage
think of a theme, it could be a recent personal experience, an issue
at work or a relationship that has been making you ponder, or even
something from your childhood, the key is to really think about it,
about the essence of it. At a base level this is what writing can do
for individuals - let you explore what is in your mind… at base
level this is what blogging does for the many fans of it.
Is
it therapy or therapeutic?
Many
people argue that as the world has become more technology based, that
according to the Guardian, the UK has become “gadget
obsessed”, that people have actually communicated less. It’s
well documented that family life is now a very different concept to
the one that say our parents and grandparents experienced — so, is
there also an argument that writing offers some people the
opportunity to say the things that they need to, and that in years
gone by perhaps they would have said to a family member? It’s a
tricky concept for some to tackle, but many people who write blogs
would probably agree that there is a layer of therapy attached to
getting your thoughts and feelings down on paper or typed on screen.
It might not be the whole package but it seems writing can play an
important factor in keeping the mind and body healthy.
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