Andrew Burton asks: does writing contribute to your wellbeing?
DH Lawrence famously observed that "one sheds one's sicknesses in books", which in his case was demonstrably true. But for the rest of us, what is the relationship between writing and wellbeing?
Last week, I delivered a presentation at Reminiscence Network East’s annual conference, on the subject of Creative Writing and Dementia. My literature research into this area had been inspired by Writing Home, a project I am currently involved with which takes place between May and July this year and is a partnership between Essex County Council and Essex Dementia Care. Writing Home explores the impacts of creative writing and reminiscence on the wellbeing of people with early stage dementia who already meet regularly to enjoy other social, arts and crafts activities.
For the past year or so, I have also been facilitating a series of monthly writing workshops alongside a storyteller and an audio artist at a hospice in Essex, as part of a Creative Hub. In this setting, and with the trust that is gained by meeting a group of people regularly over months, the vital role writing can play in an individual’s life has become evident. Through the act of writing and sharing their stories, some participants have found a way of reflecting on the value of their lives up to this point, and of leaving a poignant and lasting legacy to future generations of their family, stories that might otherwise never have seen the light of day.
I have also been working recently with a Bereavement Service, bringing bereaved people together within a safe and supportive environment to write down and then share some of their resonant memories, feelings and thoughts, prompted by a range of writing exercises. The results that emerge – invariably highly charged and emotive – are sometimes breathtakingly powerful in their honesty and simplicity, a reminder that all stories start, according to WB Yeats in The Circus Animals' Desertion, "in the foul rag and bone shop of the heart”.
For anyone who would like to find out more about the field of therapeutic writing, I would recommend reading some of the many excellent titles published by specialist imprint Jessica Kingsley Publishers. Bloomsbury also publishes a range of titles in this area, including the transformational Writing Your Self by Myra Schneider and John Killick.
For people wishing to explore this subject further and perhaps to link up with fellow practitioners in their region, I would strongly recommend joining the ‘words for wellbeing’ organisation Lapidus. As well as an informative journal, it has a lively Facebook forum and will help bring you up to speed on current events, activities and best practice in this challenging and highly rewarding field.
The National Association of Writers in Education also offers occasional courses in writing and wellbeing and is well worth looking up, particularly if you also have an interest (as the name suggests!) in working as a writer within an educational context.
On a personal note, whenever I am able to write in a regular and sustained way I find that I am on better terms with myself. The writing becomes rewarding in its own right; process rather than product, journey rather than destination. It can even have a spiritual dimension, as adherents of Julia Cameron’s The Artist’s Way will attest. The alternative, as Dorothea Brande notes in her inspirational writing guide Becoming a Writer, is to drop back "into a life with no creative outlet, unhappy, thwarted, and restless".
Perhaps this connection between writing and being on good terms with oneself is what Zadie Smith was driving at when she commented: “Good writing requires – no, demands – good being. I’m absolutely adamant on this point”.
What role does writing play in your life? Does it contribute to your sense of wellbeing?
Do let me know please, by replying to this post.
Andrew Burton is a freelance literature professional and arts marketer. He works with Essex Book Festival on writer development projects, with Essex County Council and others on creative writing projects for health and well being, and runs monthly theatre writing workshops at the University of Essex’s Lakeside Theatre, where he is an Associate Artist. For further information visit: www.andrewcburton.co.uk or follow him on Twitter @andyrooburton
Dear Andrew,
Thank you for sharing your thoughts that are so inspirational. For me writing provides a flow where I am in sink with my emotions. I am at the happy place and feel very good demonstrating the therapeutic benefits. I feel that I am able to visit my inner self and explore concepts that perhaps I could have left had I not written about them. I learn a lot about myself be able to identify my strengths in the voice I am creating. It helps appreciate and critique things much better when I write them, and attempting to creat a perspective that may become a legacy to teach others. When I wrote my first book-My Life in England, I wrote from the heart and I found the experience was challenging in a good way. The fact that I was lucky my book is now published, I feel others can learn from my story.
Regards,
Mary p.s you may view the synopsis of this book on Amazon(My Life in England-Dream Come a True or Ruin?
This article starts with a quote from DH Lawrence and I happened to watch his life story a week ago after a bout of insomnia. It details his battle with alcoholism and how it sometimes consumed his life making it difficult for him to find his voice in the world.
Perhaps writing was a form of release from his life long battle with his illness.
Like the 12 step AA meetings, Julia Cameron in The Artists Way helps creatives to unblock and perhaps find a different voice to the one they have been using.
The best way to survive an illness to be able to manage it successfully. There may not be a cure for a particular illness, but finding ways to release the frustration, pain and anxiety that are the side effects to the human condition will help victims to endure.
I think DL Lawrence found that writing helped him endure his illness and it keet the shadows at bay that taunted him his entire life.
Thanks Adrian, Kate, Carole, Susan and Neeraj for your considered responses. Good to know that writing occupies such a central part in your lives, whether or not you consider it contributes to your sense of well being.
Anyone else out there strongly agree or disagree?