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walks of life because it sensitizes them to beauty, helps heal them physically and mentally, and creates within them a greater awareness of possibilities. The arts help patients and clients by increasing self-esteem, improving motor coordination and body control, providing relaxation, teaching coping skills, decreasing acting-out behaviors, and developing awareness of emotions or underlying issues (H. Kennedy et al., 2014). “It can be said that . . . creative endeavors offer multidisciplinary ways to give voice to the human internal experience and to act as catalysts for learning about the self and the world at large” (Bradley et al., 2008, p. 44).

      The possibilities for using specific creative arts in counseling, singularly and together, are covered in various ways in this book. Mental health professionals can use established arts, such as books and drama, or art making, such as writing and role playing, to improve and enhance the physical, mental, emotional, and social well-being of individuals of all ages. The processes and outcomes of using the arts in a therapeutic manner are addressed here as they relate to specific client populations. Just as becoming a painter takes talent, sensitivity, courage, and years of devotion, a similar process is at work in counseling: The actual practice differs from knowledge of theory. Csikszentmihalyi (1996) hypothesized that it takes at least 10 years of being in a field before a person is able to master it. Thus, the 10-year rule for bringing talent to fruition seems to apply to artists, counselors, or anyone who is refining their talent. Therefore, although the ingredients necessary to enrich counseling through using the arts are emphasized here, effective implementation of these skills and processes will only come with practice on the part of the counselor—you!

      When examining the creative arts in counseling as an entity, it is crucial to first explore the nature of creativity. This examination is prudent for two reasons. First, by knowing something about the nature of creativity, counselors may understand and better appreciate creative processes. Second, counseling, as mentioned previously, is by its nature a creative endeavor (McCarthy, 2018). Although the arts have much potential to help counselors in assisting clients, they are limited in what they can do unless counselors know how to use them creatively.

      Creativity is an overused word that is sometimes talked about without being defined. It is a lot like kissing in that it is so “intrinsically interesting and satisfying that few bother to critically examine it” (Thoresen, 1969, p. 264). A central feature of creativity is divergent thinking, which is thinking in a broad, flexible, exploratory, tentative, inductive, and non-data-based way that is oriented toward the development of possibilities. Divergent thinking includes fluency, flexibility, originality, and elaboration in thought as well (Carson, 1999). Creativity and divergent thinking are associated with coping abilities, good mental health, resiliency, and couple/family functionality and happiness (Cohen, 2000; Csikszentmihalyi, 1996; Pink, 2006). According to Sternberg and Lubart (1996, p. 677), as an overall process, creativity involves “the ability to produce work that is both novel (i.e., original or unexpected) and appropriate (i.e., useful or meets task constraints).” It is positively related to spontaneity and negatively related to impulsivity (Kipper et al., 2010).

      Creative Reflection

      Many people find ideas coming to them at specific times of the day, such as early morning, or when they are engaged in certain activities, such as taking a shower. Think of when ideas are most likely to come to you. Keep a daily chart for a week of new ideas and the times in which they come. What does this activity tell you about yourself and what you need to be most mindful of in finding time to be creative?

      In counseling and other helping professions, combining creativity with the arts frequently results in (a) the production of a tangible product that gives a client insight, such as a piece of writing or a painting; or (b) a process that the clinician formulates, such as a new way of conducting counseling that leads to client change, such as animal-assisted therapy or therapeutic horticulture. Creativity is a worldwide phenomenon that knows no bounds with regard to ethnicity, culture, gender, age, or other real or imagined barriers that separate people from one another (Koestler, 1964; Lubart, 1999). In addition, creativity can be preventive as well as remedial. Duffey (2015), a major advocate for the use of creativity in counseling, a term she devised, stated, “Creativity is as fundamental to counseling practice as the therapeutic relationship. In the best sense, the therapeutic relationship ignites creative problem solving, understanding, flexibility, and adaptability. In turn, this shared creativity deepens the counseling relationship.”

      Overall, creativity is a nonsequential experience that involves two factors: originality and functionality. A distinction can and should be made between little-c creativity, that is, “everyday problem solving and the ability to adapt to change,” and big-C Creativity, that is, “when a person solves a problem or creates an object that has a major impact on how other people think, feel, and live their lives” (Kersting, 2003, p. 40). Big-C Creativity is much rarer than little-c creativity. An example of Big-C Creativity is the formulation of counseling theories such as those devised by Sigmund Freud and Carl Rogers (Gladding, 2008). However, individual counseling mostly involves little-c creativity, as counselors work with clients to find more productive and constructive ways of living. Regardless of whether it is big-C or little-c, both types of creativity involve a six-step process (Witmer, 1985):

      1 Preparation, during which enough data and background information are gathered to make a new response

      2 Incubation, in which the mind is allowed to wander away from a task or problem

      3 Ideation, in which ideas are generated but not judged, a type of divergent thinking

      4 Illumination, in which there is a breakthrough in a person’s thinking, a kind of enlightenment

      5 Evaluation, during which convergent and critical thinking occur. A part of evaluation is fine-tuning and refining thoughts or behaviors that have not been thoroughly considered.

      6 Verification/production, during which an original idea becomes a new or refined product or action. In this last step, a person’s life changes forever because it is impossible to see or be in the world again as before.

      Although these general aspects of creativity are pertinent to counseling, the profession itself, through its theories, has even more specific ways of viewing creativity (Gladding, 1995). For example, the psychoanalytic viewpoint is that creativity is a positive defense mechanism, known as sublimation. From a gestalt perspective, however, creativity is an integrative process in which people become more congruent with themselves and their environments and thus try new behaviors. Imagery theorists, however, argue that creativity is a matter of envisioning mental pictures and implementing these pictures in reality.

      Regardless of how it

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