Creative expression can transform painful reactions and situations, providing strength and understanding to change how we feel and interact with the world.

And works of art made by others can remodel our inner realities.

Some think art needs to have that kind of impact to be worthwhile. Franz Kafka wrote, “I think we ought to read only the kind of books that wound and stab us.. that affect us like a disaster... A book must be the axe for the frozen sea inside us.”

Clinical and forensic psychologist Dr. Stephen Diamond says creativity “is one of humankind's healthiest inclinations, one of our greatest attributes.”

He explains in his book, "Anger, Madness, and the Daimonic: The Psychological Genesis of Violence, Evil, and Creativity," that our impulse to be creative "can be understood to some degree as the subjective struggle to give form, structure and constructive expression to inner and outer chaos and conflict... for meeting and redeeming one's devils and demons."

A number of actors have talked about this kind of “constructive expression.”

Sally Field was 17 when she won an audition for Gidget and later said, "Before, I had always felt so trapped. Acting saved my life."

Charlize Theron as a teen saw her mother shoot her father in self defense, and says work has helped her deal with it: "I think acting has healed me. I get to let it out. I get to say it and feel it in my work and I think that's why I don't go through my life walking with this thing, and suffering."

The “deep hurts” many people experience can fuel creative projects. Director Allison Anders made her film "Things Behind the Sun" as a way to deal with her rape. Native American painter Roxanne Chinook says her art helps healing from the traumas of her past: “The process of creating strengthens and restores my spirit.”

Rosanne Cash deals with the recent deaths of both her mother and father Johnny in her album "Black Cadillac," and noted in a Los Angeles Times interview: "I'm not the first person to make an album about death; I'm not even the first person in my family. My dad made music about his own death coming. He was an artist, and he could use his own life in an unsentimental way to make art. He was unafraid. For the rest of us that could be hard. But I understand it. And I learned from it."

The book Emotional Alchemy by Tara Bennet-Goleman is about dealing wtih negative thoughts and emotions that “disturb our inner equilibrium,” as the Dalai Lama writes in the foreword. Psychologist Bennet-Goleman says the antidote for such disturbance "is mindfulness, which involves being aware of our emotions without being ruled by them."

Creative expression, like psychotherapy and spiritual development, can be a way to become more aware, and also deal with high sensitivity.

Among other experts, Linda Kreger Silverman, PhD, director of the Gifted Development Center in Denver, says gifted and creative people tend to be emotionally sensitive throughout life.

That kind of intensity and sensitivity can lead to strong passions like anger. Dr. Diamond says there is "a very strong correlation between anger, rage and creativity. Most of us tend to view anger or rage negatively, associating it almost exclusively with destructiveness and violence. Certainly this correlation exists. But anger can also motivate constructive and creative behavior."

Judith Orloff M.D. in her book Positive Energy, says creativity is “the mother of all energies, nurturer of your most alive self. It charges up every part of you. This energy rises from your own life force and from a larger spiritual flow.”

Even if we aren’t an “artist” - or don’t even want to be identified that way - we can help improve our emotional health through creative expression, such as performing in a community theater play, writing a memoir, taking a watercolor class, or doing something else to express our demons in positive ways.

Author's Bio: 

Douglas Eby writes about psychological and social aspects of creative expression and personal growth. His site has a wide range of articles, interviews, quotes and other material to inform and inspire: Talent Development Resources