10 Nurturing Paths to Creativity
Creativity has been both my refuge and my guide in these tender months of grief and exhaustion. This is Part 2 of a two-part series, where I continue to explore how creativity offers quiet pathways to healing when life feels undone.
In Part 1, I shared the personal ways creativity has held me through loss, stitching solace into the fabric of my days.
Now, I gently offer ten ways for you to invite creativity into your own healing journey — small, simple ways to nurture your spirit without pressure or expectation. Just possibilities. Just the soft invitation to begin.
Creativity as a Constant Companion
Grief, loss, exhaustion – these are mighty forces. And yet, woven gently alongside them, creativity has been my quiet, constant companion. It hasn’t needed to be spectacular, nor productive, nor even shared. It’s simply needed to be.
10 Ways to Healing with Creativity
For those of you walking a similar path, here are 10 gentle ways to let creativity help you heal. No pressure. Just possibilities.
1. Create Without Purpose
Let go of outcomes. Paint, sketch, stitch, or write simply for the moment’s pleasure. No ‘good enough’, no goal. Just you, colour, line, texture, thought.
We so often put pressures on ourselves to create with an outcome in mind and find ourselves stifled, blocked from creating anything.
Making time to simply create, to make marks in our own ways, can be soothing.
2. Revisit Old Skills with New Eyes
Pick up an old creative habit – the way I returned to quilting and then started sashiko.
Notice what feels familiar, what feels different. You are different now – let that shape the making.
We are always growing and evolving with every experience we navigate, from the heart warming ones to the heart rendering ones. So we are never exactly the same as we were, even just a year ago.
But there is comfort in exploring favourite old creative practices.
3. Savour Someone Else’s Art
Let another’s creativity hold you. A novel, a film, a piece of music. Watch light play on the sea. Breathe in the craft and care of others and let it restore you.
I find this particularly nurturing, allowing myself to be in the flow of another’s creativity.
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4. Create in Community
Join others – a quilting group, a spinning circle, a sketch club. When you can’t carry your own spark, let theirs warm you. They will gently tend your flame until it flickers back to life.
It is fascinating how so many others have similar experiences of loss, of experiences where they need to heal while life still goes on all around.
This is so often shared in quiet words, a kind gesture, a gentle gift shared.
5. Tend Small Creative Rituals
A single daily stitch. One brush of watercolour. A sentence in a journal. Something tiny, tended every day. Like brewing tea – quiet, regular, nourishing.
Making a mark a day, in whatever manner or format can be a gentle creative practice.
I’ve found a lot of comfort in my intentional creative practice routines. And now that I have a sense of my creativity returning I am experimenting with some different techniques, again, with no purpose other than trying something different.
6. Design a Future Dream
Sketch plans for a garden. Draft an idea for a studio. Dream of your own little art farm. Let creativity reach towards tomorrow, shaping a life you’ll grow into.
Create a 12 month calendar for yourself of attending workshops, exhibitions, art retreats and/or opens studio trails.
What would it look like if you attended 2-4 exhibitions or open studios, went to 1-3 workshops or art retreats in the coming year? If you’re already doing this, well done! Do you want to shift any of it with more or less of anything?
7. Let Nature Be Your Muse
Sit with the sky, the sea, the garden. Sketch the clouds. Write about the wind. Gather leaves or shells. Nature makes beauty without striving – you can too.
Nature is such a beautiful muse for healing. Just sitting watching a view, wide or contained, with life in and through it has the ability to open paths to inner peace.
I’m loving watching a small flock of currowongs coming to eat the diced up apple I put out in the mornings. I’m learning so much about them and starting to feel the creative urge to sketch them.
It’s the little steps.
8. Accept Creative Help
Ask for advice, support, a second pair of eyes. As I did with the quilters helping design my border. Healing allows space for receiving as well as making.
This is something that I’m finding to be quite fascinating, the learning from others, accepting the ways they are giving me TLC.
Plus, I’m learning new skills and techniques. For example, I’ve just learnt how to baste a quilt on a table and using the very long doll makers needles.
All very logical but I had no idea until the ladies so generously shared their knowledge and help.
9. Craft a Tribute
Make something in memory of a loved one – a woven piece, a quilt, a poem, a garden bed. Let grief and love shape something beautiful that holds their presence.
The quilt that I started basting on a table with very long needles is one that I shared the designing with mum. She loved it so much she gave me beautiful woollen wadding for it.
And the quality of the wadding/batting is coming through already in how it feels. This quilt is feeling very specially connected with mum.
I’m looking forward to planting trees, bushes and flowers in honour of my mum, dad and sister. And I must confess, I am enjoying thinking about what sort of flora would celebrate each of them.
10. Rest in Creative Stillness
Sometimes the most creative act is doing nothing at all. Sitting, breathing, letting ideas drift like clouds. Rest makes space for quiet new beginnings.
I’m starting to come out of this stage and am wanting to maintain elements of it. I found it so nourishing for my spirit.
My creativity can be quite loud sometimes and as the muse returns I feel like I need to be having some discussions about enjoying resting in creative stillness.
A Final Whisper
These gentle ways are not tasks, nor cures. They are small handrails to hold while the waves of life and grief wash over and past.
Creativity will wait patiently, ready to catch your hand when you reach for it.
I am reaching too and finding that I am flowing.
Meet Colourist Robyn Malcolm
Meet Robyn Malcolm, a colourist whose expressive use of colour, pastel and oil reveals a lifelong creative journey from textiles to painting.
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