I've been noticing that a lot of people on this forum seem to be very creative. There are artists, poets and I'm a writer. I know that I do it as it gives me a break from reality, others seem to use it as a way to deal with their pain. I just wondered how common it is between PTSD sufferers.
Self-expression, art and creativity and their contribution to mental health and well-being is something I am also interested in.
Without my poetry and performance I wouldn't have been able to express myself and exorcise the ghosts of a hidden painful past. Or begin to make sense out of what I have been through. Or have a pathway to empowerment.
I don't know about PTSD so much but I read in a report into the care needs of childhood sexual abuse (CSA) survivors* that many were to be found in the creative industries and artistic communities.
One theory was that they found more open minded tolerance, and understanding in this generally liberally minded field, and many gay, lesbian, transgender people also gravitated towards these areas of life for the same reason.
I didn't know about my abuse until I was nearly 40 years old, the PTSD like symptoms I have experienced only started then.
In the first theatre group I was in, we were a young rag-tag bunch of angry outsiders ranting at and taking the piss out of society. Venting our mutual spleens at percieved injustices perpetuated by the "patriarchal capitalist oppressors running and ruining the world". So much angst and anger had to go somewhere. A need to express powerful emotion positively resulted in my creativity in adult life.
So much intensity involved in PTSD, I feel blessed to have had the years of acting that gave me the skills to mask or express the pain and torment so I could survive and hopefully now thrive.
*It was a report published in 2005 that led to the Scottish Govt's Strategy for Survivors of CSA. Their website has changed so I can't give exact link.
http://www.survivorscotland.org.uk/research-library/item/national-strategy-document-1/