Finding a Way to Say I Love You

I find that in my line of work as a Clinical Social Worker, sometimes the best “workshops” are not workshops at all, but the chance to use art in a moment of crisis to help children deal with big feelings that are overwhelming.

Last December I was supervising a visit with a sibling group of ten. The oldest teens were asleep on the sofa ignoring everyone, the youngest were gathered around a laptop having a Zoom visit with Mom. The middle child, My’Anna, sat down next to me, put her head on her arms and began to weep. I asked her what was wrong and she answered, “I don’t know how to tell my mom how much I love her!”

I offered her some paper and colored pencils and told her, “Maybe you can draw her a picture to show her how much you love her?” She smiled and began drawing this picture of “her whole family in a beautiful place with a rainbow heart in the sky” and when she was finished ran to the laptop to show her mother her drawing. She was beaming with happiness in finding a way to express her feelings in a non-verbal way and her mother told her she had done a beautiful job.

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A Window Between Worlds (AWBW) supports hundreds of art workshop facilitators across the country to incorporate creative expression into their work with trauma survivors. These Windows Facilitators serve 40,000 adults, teens, and children each year. Through these stories, we invite you to explore and share their journeys toward transformation and healing.

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