Art Therapy

Tantalizing Trauma

 
 

Trauma is something that can be challenging. Many individuals have dealt with trauma, and if you haven’t sometimes that can be lucky. It is a subject that takes a lot of growth, strength, and results in many positive and negative outcomes. Here are a few various types that I have found, or experienced; if you would like more information you can click here.

Types of Trauma:

  • Acute Trauma (single experience)

  • Complex Trauma (Chronic)

  • Developmental Trauma (early onset trauma starting within childhood; repetitive within their care giving system)

  • Inter-generational Trauma (living with someone that has emotional effects from their trauma; possibility to be passed on through generations)

  • PTSD (Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder; can be acute or complex)

    There are more classifications but those mostly fall under the ones I have already listed.

 

Trauma can be a very personal subject, given the circumstance and varies from each person. This includes how they cope, heal, learn, and the affect on one’s mental state. Many times without realizing you can trigger traumatic experiences, even with small characterizations. This can be explained with simple anxiety for an unknown reason, or an emotional that over takes you.

Kemper-Web-25.JPG
 
 

 
 

I have dealt with trauma more than I would like to admit, continuing from a young age. Within the time of the traumatic events, most I had not actually realized this was trauma and was out of my control. Things happen and you have to make the best from the outcomes. This is something that I will carry with the rest of my life, as well as anyone else. When going through childhood and dealing with this, I was often challenged because of what I was going through. When in grade school, I had lived across the street from a few people went to my school as well. Mind you, I went to a small catholic school that was getting into the rural outskirts of Northern Kentucky.

I was bullied and excluded for what was going on at my home because my family was so different compared to everyone else’s. They were all related, or even if not, it was rare to have parents that were divorced. My second grade teacher punished my attendance just because I was with my mom certain weeks since she was the one that had moved out of the house. When I would get on the school bus in the morning after rough night within my house, I would frequently get asked of what the girl in my class and her family saw from across the street. There were many times that she would tell our teachers about that past night. Of course they would pull me out of class individually and question me about what they had heard. It had made me extremely self-conscious of my family, myself, and life events.

This resulted in making me a target for majority of the class (and school) at some point or another throughout my 8 years there. Most people had known of what had gone on those nights by an hour into school starting. My family was very different compared to the rest of them, making it easier for me to stick out. I didn’t care about fitting in with crowds or having people like me, but I did care that they began to treat me different from the other classmates. At that time, school felt like one of the safest places for me on those weeks.

It was confusing for me to go through all of this at once. I learned a lot from my surroundings and it has made me a stronger person. For a kid, I was forced to grow up quickly because I had to cope and parent myself on some days. Resulting in not getting as much of a childhood as others, missing core qualities within my care support system.


Trauma healing can be difficult so do not let yourself get discouraged if you are still struggling this aspect of your life.

 
 
 
 

Check out an installation I designed according to My Own depression & trauma:

 
 
 
 

Line Warp

This week I focused on stress, as a young-adult full time college student in this ever so changing era. Anxiety is always a factor within my life and as a person changes, our coping factors can vary as we grow. This is a common struggle that most of us face throughout our lives. Certain coping methods I have sampled still work but have been noticing the effectiveness has diminished. Equally, I am continuing my path deeper into the contemporary art world, I want to transition my life further as a whole.

Growth is a wondrous thing that can happen.

I began researching basic release methods in addition to what methods I haven tried in the past and currently use. Specifically with stress-releasing, creative outlet release methods. There are foundational tools to reflect on as an artist that are also efficient. These artist tools are a beneficial way to let go of these constant worries, a utility method to let go of those heavy mind-dwelling thoughts.


The exercise I completed:

Focusing with making lines on a blank paper. Don't think about what you are attempting to accomplish. Let your hands do all the work and follow instinct. Keep it simple with whatever writing medium you choose. Stick with one or two colors of pens (markers, etc.), as you do not want to waste time on this distraction. The point is to be in the present. Focusing on simple lines, weights, and forms that will build up over time to fill out the page.

Do not attempt to strategize as to what your first ideals are, whether this derives from the conscious or subconscious. Focusing on this sole task will bring clarity and relieve the worry of what comes next within a creative procedure. Let your mind wander and play with anything that comes to you during, allowing experimentation, and emotional influences to express through. 

KemperBlog-2.jpeg

First Exercise Trial

Black ink only,

Another De-stress Option:

An additional release within art I like to include is whatever emotion, or sensations you are not capable to fully overcome. This could be as a label, category, or rather the feelings that distract you as multiples. In the beginning upon looking at the paper, throughout the creation, or at the final stage. It is whatever the individual(s) chooses within those moments of this tension and headache.

KemperBlog-1.jpeg

Second Exercise Trial

Black ink. Focused on simplistic lines with a hard edge.