This story is from July 26, 2020
As stress and anxieties rise, many turn to arts for the healing touch
Art
has always been therapeutic. But itshealing
qualities are being rediscovered as lockdowns of varying severity leave many disoriented, disheartened and despairing, leading to a surge in cases ofanxiety
anddepression
.Priyanka Rathi, a young photographer, was coping with the emotional
stress
of a breakup with her live-in partner when the lockdown came into effect. She moved back in with her family in Noida but the deep uncertainties that came with the pandemic accentuated her anxieties.This has been a year that has taken away old comforts, leaving uncertainty, even despondency, in its wake. Isolation and social distancing, the only way to negotiate the pandemic, have also triggered stress and anxiety in many, affecting work and relationships. It is here that the restorative quality of the arts manifests itself. Art
therapy
is being used as an essential tool for intervention, both by qualified practitioners as well as artistes.“Music therapy, specifically in these trying times, can provide emotional grounding and calm. It can also help build a healthy sense of inter-personal connect even though we are required to exercise physical distancing in our daily and work lives,” explains Shreeti Pradhan, a clinical music therapist working in the areas of mental health rehabilitation in women and children, and emotional well-being in adults and the elderly. Pradhan, who divides her time between Delhi and Kathmandu, has been in Nepal since the lockdown.
Borthakur knows what it’s like to be in a dark place, having battled depression for the best part of four years, much of it alone. She is presently undergoing therapy and is on medication. It’s something poignantly close to her heart. “There is no shame in admitting how one is feeling and what one is going through. It is about time people accepted that depression is real and not just mere sadness,” stresses Borthakur.
Thus far, Delhi-based multi-genre band Jazba-e-Junoon, folk singer Kalpana Patowary, violinist Sandeep Thakur, tabalchi Sabir Hussain and Sufi rockers Zikrr have embraced the initiative, as have educators and entrepreneurs.
“Teenagers have a lot of energy and that has to be channelised in the correct manner. With the lockdown, those pent-up energies made them agitated and sometimes violent. When they attend our online classes, the activities help consume those energies and they get channelled in a creative direction,” says Bhatnagar.
At the Gurugram-based Danza Performing Arts, Swati Mohan has been conducting virtual dance tutorials since March. “There is always a discussion, a reflection at the end of the class about what each of us has discovered. Most of them tell me how eagerly they wait for these sessions, because there is so much frustration inside,” Mohan says.
The relationship between the arts and mental health is well established in the field of art therapy. But, while art cannot heal serious mental-health disorders, a deep engagement with it can lead to self-discovery. Besides, drawing, sketching or doodling do not require artistic ability, only a creative bent of mind.
When Karishma Ahuja conducted an art therapy session on Zoom recently, she was surprised by the number of people who signed up for it. Ahuja, an image consultant and founder of skill-development outfit Imedge, organised a seven-day virtual programme on emotional intelligence and mindfulness through art.
According to Mohan, it’s all about looking for the light in dark times. “The principle I follow is of finding opportunity in adversity. When you begin to work on yourself, that is when the deep healing happens,” she says.
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