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Free Expression

This past week was an incredibly hectic one for me. I thought having classes only Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday this semester would make life easier, but I was sadly mistaken. Due to a compact schedule and my decision to get involved with four clubs/societies this year, Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays are jam-packed from early morning hours until the dark of night. This past week, I was on campus for 11-13 hours each day. I was mentally and physically exhausted… more than ready for the weekend.

During a very short break between meetings and classes, I headed to the art therapy studio and sat down. I looked around me and decided I wanted to make art with nothing but the materials I could find in the room. I didn’t bring any of my own supplies whatsoever. I knew I wanted to paint, but didn’t have any canvas. I found cardboard scraps and knew this would be my painting surface. I grabbed black and white paint and then neon pink and purple. I saw a box of paper scraps that were all torn book pages. I grabbed these without any purpose and plopped down in my chair.

I had no intention to create what I ended up creating. I took this time as a moment to let loose. I feel as though this past week turned me into a huge ball of stress, and I needed some ME time. I needed time where I didn’t think about school, papers, exams, meetings, forms, family, friends, emails, food shopping, house cleaning, laundry. I wanted my brain to breathe and be calm – no more voices telling me what to do or where to be.

The cardboard had a crease in it, dividing it into two sections. I decided to paint one side black and one side white. I then began dabbing the pink onto the white section, trying to create an ombre effect in which it faded into the purple. After a few minutes I began to examine myself. My original goal was to let loose in this ME session, yet I was trying to paint something perfectly. I scooped a glob of pink paint onto my brush and started to scribble it all around the white section of the cardboard. I then did the same with the purple. I was painting looser than I ever have before. I began to glue book scraps onto the piece and paint over it in some sections. At this point I was creating art entirely expressively.

I caught myself smiling and suddenly the weight of my stressors slid right off my back.

For 30 minutes, I was my own art therapist.

Later on that night, when my schedule finally cleared and I had nothing left to do but go to bed, I found myself back in the art therapy studio. I grabbed black and white paint, cardboard, and book scraps. I created three more pieces in a similar fashion to the original pink and purple piece, changing the color scheme each time.

The first piece is definitely my favorite. I believe it symbolizes many things:

My excitement for my future career as an art therapist grows stronger each and every day.

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