TOUCH DRAWING AND BEYOND...continued
Group Exhibition at Portland Library, Portland, Maine
Helen Warren
Touch Drawing as a part of my overall creative process is a place in which to experience the most amazing and authentic reflections of the energies present within and around me at the moment of drawing....the creatures, tree people and ancient sacred ones. It is, therefore, a place of deep healing and of affirmation for my deepest knowing. I am so grateful to Deborah for gifting us all with this profound and magical process!
Debra Windy HorseAs a healing arts practitioner I work with energies. Touch Drawing is a visual expression of these same energies manifesting and communicating in infinite visual images. When I Touch Draw I am tapping into that Universal Source that informs all creation. The process is truly empowering, healing and inspiring. My art invites the viewer to engage with the work through their own interpretation of the imagery, and more importantly to the engage in the energy and emotion of each piece. I hope my art will touch that deep place of remembering our sacred connection to all creation, helping to heal the divide between ourselves, nature and spirit. Thanks so very much Deborah....and I join the many who are soooooo grateful to have this creative process in our lives!!!
Jennifer Wadsworth
I integrated Touch Drawing into my creative process several years ago. The images are the result of my connection to the energy and rhythm of the present. I use fabric and canvas as tissue is used in the Touch Drawing process and then I embed the paint in the fabric. By using many thin layers of pigment I develop the images from my imagination. My goal, to share the experience of my creative journey, is achieved when friends and strangers engage in a visual conversation with my work.
Joan Jordan
This series of masks illustrates my inner hopes and fears in an outer recognizable expression which felt safe. The 2 year journey began as a Touch Drawing workshop and ended by exhibiting my vision masks in this exciting show in Portland, Maine.
SoulCards in the Hospital...continued
Karen Berg-Smith, Illona Root-Chang, & Becky Leonard
SoulCards in Individual Therapy Illona Root-Chang
One of my most memorable applications of the SoulCards in individual therapy arose with a gentleman, who arrived at Post-Acute Services for physical therapy and rehabilitation of a sprained ankle. Prior to his hospitalization, this patient was homeless, with a long history of obesity and drug abuse. In beginning our work together, it quickly became apparent that this patient had considerable internal resources, ready to be accessed, in helping him to become engaged in his life and to walk again. Our Expressive Art Therapy sessions ran parallel to his Physical Therapy Treatment, and our shared goals of building self-esteem, motivation, and insight, supported and energized his rehabilitation efforts.
This patient was particularly responsive to a Cognitive-Behavioral approach and the cards came to represent specific actions or feelings that were named, and then
together, we identified ways he could make the needed behavioral changes toward healing and wellness. In the assessment phase, the cards were helpful in letting me know how comfortable the patient felt in the symbolic world, and additionally, his ability to work with themes and metaphors. Initially, we worked with the cards facing up, to assist him in concretizing and clarifying his goals. The patient picked three cards and immediately proceeded to tell me about each aspect of his life that it represented: the past, the present, and the future. The card for his present was of an image of a sun. He elaborated that this image represented for him, that he was ready to step into his bigness as he named it, and begin to take responsibility for his life again. This card also represented his desire to walk. With this image, I could then explore and elaborate with him what the bigness looked like in relationship to his walking. This image began to serve as a strong motivator in his Physical Therapy process.
Throughout the three months of his hospitalization, we returned often to the SoulCards to assist in identifying where he was in his process, and every time, the images revealed deeper layers of meaning. The SoulCard process was utilized in conjunction with verbal therapy and other expressive mediums, which assisted in further exploring the material that arose for this patient. The cards offered an effective way to access emotional and personal material in this patients life in a safe and timely way, as the images evoked would often take us to the heart of the matter,
essential in a short-term therapy process. Finally, during our closure meeting, I brought the SoulCards in one last time. This time, the cards were offered face down, as the patient indicated his readiness to be guided solely by his intuition. The last card he chose, he titled A blessing that the work has paid off. The card was an image of a woman walking away with a butterfly on her shoulder.
He shared that this image represented his own achievement of walking, as well as symbolizing his experience of transformation in therapy; he now had an ally, and he had internalized this ally, by befriending parts of himself again. The SoulCards assisted this patient in finding an imaginal language for making significant changes that were essential in his rehabilitation and preparation for returning to his life outside the hospital.
SoulCards in Group Therapy Becky Leonard
In patient groups, we often use SoulCards as a means to explore group members current experience, such as emotional and physical pain, anxiety, sadness, and depression. The group composition may vary widely from day to day, with patients often arriving late. However, the images are so evocative, that even in the event that a patient arrives late to group, he or she can easily and almost immediately become engaged. The flexibility of the cards offers endless possibilities for groups, such as utilizing the images as a springboard for conversation, storytelling, movement and visualization. We have found that it is important in group settings to model the initial step of just describing and exploring the image, prior to any interpretation. This assists in a much fuller exploration of how the images might inform an individual and/or group process.

Most recently, I used the cards in a Creative Expression group. I had the cards spread out on the table, face up, and led the group in a brief meditation, asking them to reflect inwardly, and to notice how their bodies were feeling that day and how they were feeling emotionally. Then, I asked the group members to open their eyes and chose a card or cards to express what they had discovered. Once everyone had chosen his or her card(s), everyone was invited to share. The idea was to give each patient a way to express, concretize, and if needed, to provide some distance from the pain or complex emotions he or she was feeling.

Once this was done, I asked the group then to take another brief moment and reflect inwardly to explore how theyd LIKE to feel, and then choose a card or cards to represent these feelings. Here, the idea was to give the patients an image to take with them mentally to use as a visualization tool, as well as to end the group on a positive note. I described ways to work with the image visually through silent contemplation and allowing the image to come alive. Everyone again shared and the group did end on a particularly upbeat note, with the group spontaneously bursting into song and holding hands in a circle as a closure.
SoulCards in Staff Development Becky Leonard
SoulCards can also be used as a means to connect with the hospital staff, whom often are too busy to even have time to reflect on the complex emotions they experience on a daily basis. In one such case, I integrated the SoulCards in a discussion with a staff member, who was particularly distressed over a very needy and demanding patient. The images assisted her in clarifying her feelings toward the patient and her experience of how other staff members were or were not helping her. The cards helped get her out of her head and into her heart and to how she was actually experiencing her situation. This gave her a better way to express the problem at hand and a way to see what things could effectively be done to help her situation.
In a broader way, we have been identifying ways to introduce the SoulCards to the larger community in the hospital. The cards have elicited a lot of comments from nurses when I have had them with me at the nurses station on the way to a patients room. This gave us the idea (still in the works) to put a set on a wire at each of the nurses stations with a small sign, inviting the staff, patients, and visitors to explore the cards as a means to identify their feelings, gain insight, or find some inspiration. I also plan to use the SoulCards as a means to start our next staff discussion around creating positive change on the unit and improving patient satisfaction. I will suggest that each person choose a card that reflects how they see the unit now, and if they wish to change it, to choose a card that symbolizes their intention of how they would like things to be. By doing this, this process will assist the conversation to ensue from a creative mind from the outset, allowing for easier, more imaginative and innovative problem solving for the deepest benefit of all, patients and staff together. |
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