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Writing as a Way of Healing
Writing as a Way of Healing: How Telling Our Stories Transforms Our Lives | Louise DeSalvo
7 posts | 6 read | 2 reading | 6 to read
Acclaimed author Louise DeSalvo draws on her own experience and the lives of others to examine the healing power of the writing process. In this landmark work, DeSalvo uses her twenty years as a teacher of writing to explore how the creative process can in fact be a restorative tool. She looks at the cutting-edge scientific research on the subject and presents dozens of anecdotes of famous writers and beginners in the field to illuminate her theory that writing can repair pain--and keep our demons at bay. In Writing as a Way of Healing, DeSalvo also develops a detailed program of exercises that shows writers and nonwriters alike how to "open up" to themselves through writing, write regularly in a relaxed way, and achieve a state of personal acceptance through writing. DeSalvo's techniques will provide a solid foundation for writers to benefit both physically and emotionally from telling their stories. DeSalvo writes with remarkable insight of a wide range of writers who have found that their work helped them to heal, including Audre Lorde, Alice Walker, Kenzaburo Oe, Djuna Barnes, Peter Handke, Jamaica Kincaid, and Mark Doty. In these pages, we become familiar with writers' stories of healing: Isabel Allende deals with the anguish of sitting near her comatose daughter's bedside by beginning to compose a letter to her that eventually becomes the memoir Paula. Henry Miller, despondent when his wife, June, left him for another woman and contemplating suicide, instead works through the night on a story that details his life with June. This brief outline, written during a time of Miller's sharpest despair, serves as the inspiration for his greatest novels. DeSalvo illustrates how writers can find solace in their work if they ensure that they have a safe environment and a deliberate plan to approach the writing process. She also discusses what went wrong for writers "at risk" like Virginia Woolf and Sylvia Plath, and she warns of the danger of using writing as a call for help instead of seeking help. According to DeSalvo, the way to responsibly write, to heal, is to make an effort to understand our experiences as we write about them. The healing power comes from the reflection on the pain we are living through. In this inspiring book, highly acclaimed author and teacher Louise DeSalvo reveals the healing power of writing. Based on her twenty years of research, DeSalvo show how anyone can use writing as a way to heal the emotional and physical wounds that are an inevitable part of life. She draws on the journals, diaries, letters, and works of dozens of famous writers and students of the craft to illustrate how people "change physically and psychologically when they work on projects that grow from a deep, authentic place." With insight and wit, she illuminates how writers, from Virginia Woolf to Henry Miller to Audre Lorde to Isabel Allende, have been transformed by the wiring process. Writing as a Way of Healing includes valuable advice and practical techniques to guide and inspire both experienced and beginning writers.
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kidamy
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Yesterday was a sad day for me, fellow littens. Writing as a Way of Healing was a big book for me this year.

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peacegypsy
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The beginning of a self-care and healthy journey.

RJHowe I think writing can be a very healthy activity 6y
peacegypsy @RJHowe Agreed. As all of us on Litsy know, words save us. 😊 6y
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review
kidamy
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Pickpick

I don't think I can properly express how much I enjoyed this book and I think any prediction I make of how much this book will influence me in the future will be too conservative.
At first glance, it seems like a book on how to "properly" journal, but it prepares you to write as a memoirist, with color and depth. After years journaling, I've recently started taking my work more seriously and finally pulled this down for a read. Very happy I did.

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kidamy
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I don't know if I'd go so far as to say I "become a god," but I do know I don't like myself very much when I'm not taking the time to journal properly.

#amwriting #journal

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TheBibliotherapist
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“These are some of my “shocks”, my shifts in perspective that have come from writing. I‘ve had many wounds to heal, and I‘ve done much writing to heal them, and in the process I‘ve discovered a rich, deeply textured life I hadn‘t before recognized.”
I have just started this book but I had to share this quote from DeSalvo. I feel this way about writing as I do about reading and both are ways I connect with my clients. #najowrimo #mentalhealth

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kidamy
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And just like that, my day is planned. I've made the conscious decision to set aside both my novel and my journal for today and read. I've been feeling stuck in my journal writing; like there's an emotional blockage I can't yet identify. In the past, my depression presents as laziness, making it hard for me to relax. I need to know when to just trust myself and slow down. #dogsoflitsy

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Carrielovesbooks
Pickpick

This book is an insightful examination of how writing can be applied to exploring and healing past trauma, with many supporting quotes and references.