By Romeo Vitelli — 2014
Can increased creativity be a coping strategy for dealing with trauma?
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Scientists now have more evidence than ever before revealing the intimate, intertwined relationship between the mind and body.
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For the first time in forever, Nathan Adrian truly has no idea if he’ll have a strong swim Friday. And at this point, it doesn’t really matter to the five-time Olympic gold medalist. He’s simply elated to be back.
‘Skin cancer worked its way into my lymph nodes. I was devastated.’
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To understand the minds of individual cancers, we are learning to mix and match these two kinds of learning — the standard and the idiosyncratic — in unusual and creative ways.
The program Brushes with Cancer pairs patients with artists whose works make visible a disease that can be invisible and isolating.
In the midst of trauma, everything means something. Signs and symbols appear. You’ve noticed them before, you’re a writer, but now you see them everywhere.
The author writes that what she does on behalf of healing any individual or being must also be healing, even if not directly extended, for the world itself.
Catherine Ann Lombard explores how imagery and artistic expression can help clients cope with cancer.