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Creativity
and the Inner Child
Getting in
touch with the inner child is a process. There are both terrible and wonderful
things that the child needs to tell us about childhood feelings. Much
of what the child needs to tell us is buried in the unconscious. We were
scolded or told to "forget it!" Our needs and hurts were made unacceptable
and shoved into the darkest recesses of our minds. It's often not easy
to find out what's been so long hidden and made unthinkable.
Art and other
creative activities are great ways to access unconscious material. Whether
it's making a visual representation of a monster that came in a dream
(thus giving it shape and validating the experience) or messing around
with clay to see what emerges, art provides a medium that goes beyond
words and allows more metaphorical, less logical, processing.
You can use pastels or crayons and just start out messing around--scribbling,
making shapes, drawing anything that comes to mind. Listen to any intuitions
that come about color, shape, texture. Or you may start with a feeling
you already have (sadness, anger, joy) and see how the child inside you
wants to express it.
I use art both to attempt to represent things I've "seen" inside--as images,
mythical figures, colors and shapes--and also as a free-form way to see
what might come. When I attempt to show something I've seen inside, it
almost never comes out the way I see it, but I might get something that
comes close. In any case, the trying brings me closer to it, and I get
to see how it changes as I work.
When I begin drawing without an image in mind, it's scarier for me. What
will happen? Is there anything there? It's just messing around, a waste
of time. The critical voices come up, and I need to stave them off
by saying, "This doesn't have to be great, it's just for me." "I set aside
a half hour; just leave me alone that long," and so on. Color may start
me off-does this mood feel like green or purple or orange? A gesture or
physical movement-zig-zags, spirals, loops, or the need to fill in a whole
area. Once there is something there, it often calls for something else-a
pink feeling to offset the gray, an enclosure for the wild zig-zags, or
a wilder color to accent them and make them harsher.
Sometimes
your art work may tell you something directly--Oh! I guess I was angry--look
at those zig-zags. Other times you might not get a clear message, but
have a sense of satisfaction that something was expressed.
Over time you may develop a set of symbols or patterns that have special
significance for you. And remember-this is not art to be judged by anyone
else. It's just for you and the child. The other great thing about it
is that it can be fun.
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