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Grief Journaling Without Words

 

 

When you lose someone important to you, it can be overwhelming to try to put what you feelGrief Journaling Blog Article resized 600 into words. Sadness, anger, regret, helplessness. You are being bombarded with your own emotions, as well as those of your loved ones, and at first, it may feel suffocating and incomprehensible to try to express your grief. 

 

Allow yourself to take it slow and mourn in your own way. If you don’t feel ready to use journal writing therapy to explore your feelings yet, find another way to communicate them: through art.

  

Grief Journaling With Your Artist

 

  • Look around your house to find an artistic medium that works for you – a box of crayons, a tin of watercolors, a stack of magazines, an album of photos or just a plain old pencil. Clear off a table as your workspace and arrange everything you need to get started.

 

  • Open your journal and take a few moments to breathe and reflect on your loved one who passed away.

 

  • Start small and begin creating pictures, designs or collages with the materials you have selected. Try not to think too much about what you’re doing— just act intuitively.

 

You might begin by sketching a memory you have of the person you lost, then switch to cutting pictures out of magazines that resonate with you, then change to painting geometric patterns around the border of the page. This is perfectly fine; there is no right or wrong method to art journaling. Let go of your linear adult thinking and try to channel your creative inner child. Along the way, if you feel the desire to write, give into it and incorporate words into your art. Keep creating until you run out of steam.

 

  • Leave your artwork for a day and look at it again with fresh eyes. What does it say to you? How does it express what you were feeling at the time? How does it differ from how you are feeling today? Repeat the process as many times as you like.

 

Have you ever used art as a form of grief journaling? How do you handle grief with art, with words or….? Please share your experiences in the comments. It will help a lot of us especially this time of year!

You can find another journal writing blog article here on Grief Journaling.

Comments

Mari, this is such great advice. Sometimes, the words don't come but a more visual response works. Great to share this!
Posted @ Tuesday, December 06, 2011 3:20 PM by Patricia Anne McGoldrick
Thanks, Patricia. I've been missing my mother who art in heaven a lot this holiday season so I pulled out a big sketch pad and my Crayola 64 colors box and colored some stories for her. I sang her favorite songs too and kidded her about how she couldn't stand 'Little Drummer Boy'. This was a wonderfully comforting Journaling session!
Posted @ Tuesday, December 06, 2011 3:47 PM by Mari L. McCarthy
Thank you so much for your well thought out tips.After my son died I just wrote out bills and things I had to do.My Journal got fancy doodled J's for Joe and poetry of pain and of loving memories.(((Hugs)))Mary
Posted @ Tuesday, December 06, 2011 3:57 PM by Mary McCarthy
Wonderful prompts to get started. I made a scrapbook of major events in my Mom's life after she passed away. It was a rewarding creative project that let me reflect on her wonderful life. I've also written poems and essays about both Dad and Mom that help me release some of the grief and honor them at the same time.
Posted @ Wednesday, December 07, 2011 7:15 AM by Renee Cassese
Mari, thanks for this great prompt. My Dad passed away 5 years ago, just before Christmas. I've never really grieved for him. This is something I am definitely going to do.
Posted @ Wednesday, December 07, 2011 9:59 AM by Donna
Donna,I look forward to hearing about your experiences with grieving and honoring your Dad.
Posted @ Wednesday, December 07, 2011 10:35 AM by Mari L. McCarthy
Renee, I loved hearing about your "rewarding creative project" Thank you for reminding us how honoring is so much a part of our grieving process.
Posted @ Wednesday, December 07, 2011 10:40 AM by Mari L. McCarthy
My mom died October 25, 2011. I started a grief journal...so that I could record all the emotions I have been feeling since her death...Grieving has been the most horrible thing I have ever had to deal with..I think the journaling has helped me...!!
Posted @ Thursday, December 08, 2011 9:51 AM by Dorothy
Dorothy, I agree with you on the horribleness of grief and the helpfulness of Journaling. Journaling was my saving grace when my Mom died. I love journal writing letters to her. I know she is and will always be with me every step of the way.
Posted @ Thursday, December 08, 2011 10:02 AM by Mari L. McCarthy
Mari, 
I found this whole process you explained to be highly compassionate, intuitive, and emotionally validating. Art Journaling can be such an effective conduit for healing, especially in the face of loss.  
 
I have chosen your post, Grief Journaling without Words, for the #JournalChat Pick of the Day on 12/9/11 for all things journaling on Twitter. 
I will post a link on Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, my blog and website Refresh with Dawn Herring, and in Refresh Journal, my weekly e-journal:http://www.refreshwithdawnherring.blogspot.com/ .  
 
You're welcome to join us for #JournalChat Live on Thursdays at 5 EST/2 CST for all things journaling on Twitter.  
 
Thanks again for such a compassionate approach toward dealing with grief and loss, with or without words.  
 
Be refreshed, 
Dawn Herring 
JournalWriter Freelance  
Host of #JournalChat Live and Links Edition on Twitter 
Posted @ Friday, December 09, 2011 5:35 PM by Dawn Herring
You have the best ideas journaling always. With the fact of three more deaths before Christmas one so unexpected it was a shock to one and all and two because of cancer expected at some time,and yet still so upsetting,I have come back to your tips on Grief journaling. Thank you for your tips,all ideas and thought that you put into everything you share with all.Today is a nine yr.five month anniversary date for me also. My recent Journal now holds a page written after asking it a few things,then answering.I wrote with dark purple ink,my son,Joe's favorite color as well as my dear BD penpal friend of my heart for over 30 years,who recently passed.That Darn yankee(Me) and the Southern Lady,Becca.Thank you Mari.I admire you<3 
 
 
 
Posted @ Tuesday, December 27, 2011 8:26 PM by Mary M.McCarthy
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