This is a great thread! May not have been the intent
@vixy but I've been doing a lot of drawing over the last couple of years, and I findingthe responses very helpful.
I work with a trauma therapist doing mostly talk therapy. He isn't an art therapist and I've never been to one. I guess for the most part, it just started spontaneously without any real thought or plan. I'm naturally creative so maybe it comes from that as well.
My drawing is most often used as
@Justmehere said. It puts "words" or emotions on a page that I can't identify or verbalize. It is mostly used as homework, but always at my pace. If nothing gets done between one session and the next then that's ok. I often email what I added to a developing "frame" as I call them, and that leads in the next session.
I draw out one scene of my trauma...bit by bit. Adding in 1 item at a time. It usually spikes a huge response since the drawing seems to come alive. I use only pencils. No colors yet.
I've also used drawing in a soothing comforting way. In a session, I was describing how cold I had been during 1 part of the trauma. My Therapist suggested I draw out a pic of all the comfy things I associate with warmth. I ended up drawing a collage of items or memories of things that I find soothing and warm. Simple things. ex a mug with steaming liquid. My old dog sitting in front of the fireplace we used to have growing up. I drew one of my chairs in my living room with a blanket that I often wrap myself in after an anxiety attack or something like that. My therapist just made the suggestion. My creativity took over.
I never know what a picture is going to look like when I start something.
I too often overthink think things when I feel pressure to do something. It has to be spontaneous or it doesn't have the same effect.
I don't know what you've been encouraged to do but the spontaneous part is important. There's also no shame in just going with nothing. Perhaps some suggestions may be offered that will start the ball roling. It doesn't seem helpful to say don't pressure yourself or force something. Sometimes 1 line on a blank page is all you'll need to get going.