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Bringing the Zentangle Method into Trauma Therapy: Drawing as a Pathway to Presence, Regulation, and Healing, Part 1

Bringing the Zentangle Method into Trauma Therapy: Drawing as a Pathway to Presence, Regulation, and Healing, Part 1

CZT Jennifer Marchand writes...

As a mental health professional and registered Canadian art therapist specializing in trauma recovery, my focus has always been on grounding healing work with creativity, embodiment, and culturally responsive care. Over the past decade, I have been integrating the Zentangle Method into trauma therapy across a diverse range of contexts and cultural settings as a powerful stabilization tool, particularly by combining it with EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing) and the Flash Technique. What I have witnessed, time and again, is that Zentangle offers clients an accessible, safe, and empowering way to fully engage in trauma recovery work.

I was first introduced to the Zentangle method in 2014 by a colleague who used it to creatively engage youth in therapy. I immediately recognized the benefits of it with clients, helping them experience calm after traumatic events. It has become an important pillar of my clinical practice with clients across ages, cultures, and trauma histories. In 2022, I became a Certified Zentangle Teacher (CZT) so I could build on this work by teaching other therapists how to integrate it into their work for stabilization and as an anchor during trauma processing. For example, I have taught therapists specializing in reproductive and perinatal mental health how to use it with their client populations following trauma and loss.

I have also had the pleasure of bringing Zentangle drawing into various international programs, such as staff-care and self-care workshops for therapists and frontline workers in conflict-affected settings, including in Ethiopia. In these settings, where resources are often limited and stress levels are high, the simplicity and portability of Zentangle drawing makes it especially beneficial and effective. All that is needed is paper, pencil, and pen. It is incredibly meaningful to be able to witness people who have experienced severe hardship and adversity encounter a Zentangle pattern for the first time and discover, often quite quickly, that they can create something beautiful and achieve a sense of calm, focus, and even enjoyment at the same time. 

Below is a picture from one of my Zentangle drawing sessions for a group of therapists in Ethiopia:

An Accessible Pathway into Presence

From a mental health perspective, one of the most compelling aspects of Zentangle drawing is that it offers a way to build mindfulness and regulation skills without requiring clients to turn their attention inward too quickly. Many trauma survivors find focusing on their internal world (their thoughts, emotions, and body sensations) to be overwhelming or even destabilizing. This can make traditional relaxation approaches, such as breathwork or silent mindfulness, feel inaccessible or unsafe. 

Zentangle drawing provides a useful alternative: rather than inviting clients to look inward, it invites them to engage in an externally oriented, sensory, and embodied task. Clients can focus on one line at a time, one stroke at a time. The client can become absorbed in the flow of the ink onto the paper, the movement of their hand, and the unfolding of the pattern before their eyes. This naturally orients attention to the present moment and creates a state of calm and regulation without needing to focus inward. 

Dual Attention: Staying in the Present While Touching the Past

In trauma reprocessing work, one of the most essential capacities we aim to strengthen in our clients is the ability to remain grounded in the here-and-now while simultaneously recalling the memory we are working on. In EMDR, we call this dual attention—holding one foot in the present and the other in the past. This is not an easy skill to master, and it often takes time and careful preparation for clients to be able to mindfully observe their internal response to a memory without experiencing overwhelm. 

One reason why maintaining dual-attention can be so challenging is because trauma memories can disrupt our sense of time and orientation. They often pull us into the past and flood the body with sensations and emotions that make it feel like the event is happening again. Without a strong anchor in the present, clients can become flooded by these experiences and lose their orientation to the here-and-now. This is often called a flashback or re-experiencing.

What I have found is that Zentangle drawing is a gentle but powerful way to help clients build the skill of dual attention. The act of drawing helps keep the client oriented to the present moment and in a calm and mindful state, so that they can be guided to recall the memory without losing their footing in the present and sense of safety. 

The act of drawing acts as a steady anchor, allowing clients to briefly touch into difficult material without becoming overwhelmed. The client then learns something new: I can think of this memory and still feel safe. This makes the work of trauma recovery safer and more tolerable.

 

Stay tuned. Part II coming tomorrow...

Bijou

4 comments

  • Agradezco de una manera muy especial la dedicación, durante este mes, a los problemas de salud mental. Yo sólo puedo hablar de mis diagnósticos, de mi experiencia personal y la de otras tantas mujeres que han vivifo una situación similar, y los conocimientos que han compartido conmigo y que he reafirmado con diversa bibliografía científica, por parte de asistentes sociales, psicólogos, psiquiatras y psicoterapeutas.
    Soy mujer, Víctima de Violencia de Género, con TEPT (Trastorno de Estrés Postraumático) y TDAH (Trastorno de Déficit de Atención). Esto se traslada a mi vida diaria con episodios de ansiedad, de pánico y de épocas de agorafobia muy marcada ( incluso salir de mi dormitorio ni siquiera para ir al wc), el viento, por ejemplo, es uno de los mayores disparadores para alguno o una combinación o todos juntos, de esos episodios. Con estas dificultades trabajo desde hace 15 años.
    El TDAH, me lo diagnosticaron hace 7 años, después de muchas pruebas médicas (recuerden que en España todos tenemos derecho a una sanidad pública de calidad, de no ser así, no habría podido costearme ninguno de los excelentes profesionales que me han ayudado y me han diagnosticado). Así que soy firme candidata a llenar un álbum con todas las teselas, bijou, zendalas, phi u Oppus, de las que nos deis a disfrutar este mes: ya tengo un par de álbumes esperando por las creaciones de este mes😉.
    Yo conocí el Zentangle de la mano de @AliziaRey (CZT)y el Método de Meditación Creativa, hace más de 7 años, pero seguro que en ese tiempo aún no estaba preparada porque no conocía mi TDAH, ni las herramientas que necesitaba para paliar los efectos que ello tenía en mi mente, por lo que no pude encontrar la sensación de disfrutar aquello que me atraía tanto. Me aburrí de no llegar a lo que yo pensaba que era finalidad de este Arte, el perfeccionamiento del diseño 🤦🏻‍♀️.
    Así que, tras haber conocido, trabajado y desarrollado herramientas para convivir sin que dificulte el día a día de mi vida, de todos y cada uno de mis diagnósticos, he podido lograr entender que en la práctica del Zentangle no entran egos, o grados de perfección, o reglas milimetradas…
    Es ahora cuando lo estoy disfrutando de verdad, cuando he logrado aprender a concentrarme en un punto fijo del tamaño del soporte que usé para aplicar lo que aprendo en cursos, actividades en congresos on line y/o todas las reproducciones de vuestro canal de YouTube.
    Es impresionante lo que gracias a ustedes he aprendido: a través de las pequeñas y guiadas meditaciones que me dais a cada vídeo, a relajar mi mente y mi cuerpo, algo nada fácil hasta ahora. A enfocar mi atención hasta casi hora y media, mientras intento seguir los pasos que muestran, (y eso que, en múltiples ocasiones, pausó el vídeo para no apurar mi mano).
    De verdad y como algo que he demostrado empíricamente: el Zentangle nos da herramientas que trasladamos a nuestra vida diaria, nos enseña a que nuestra concentración y el foco de atención se van entrenando hasta que lo hacemos sin darnos cuenta, que no hay nada mejor que ante cada lección que trabajamos miles de personas, ningún resultado será idéntico a otro: la diversidad mi nueva acepción de la palabra perfección.
    Lo que me habéis enseñado durante este año, ha culminado en la necesidad de tener diariamente la oportunidad de aprender y disfrutar de vuestros actividades, proyectos y cursos. Mi mente y mi cuerpo han aprendido a sentir que el equilibrio y la estabilidad que me ofrecéis al trabajar cualquiera de vuestros diseños, puede extrapolarse al resto de mi vida. Pero para que todo esto sea posible, he de tener un entrenamiento diario, una meditación antes de una creación que me dé un chute de dopamina, adrenalina y serotonina.
    Sinceramente, os doy las gracias por enseñarme que soy capaz de mejorar cualquiera de mis diagnósticos, hasta donde aún no he llegado, y sé que no tengo vida para encontrar el final de esa mejora😉.
    Gracias por todo lo que me ofrecen día a día, y porque, el significado del título de este mes, sea como una primera parte para que vengan otros muchos meses dedicados a la Salud Mental, puesto que hay tantos diagnósticos que conlleva ese título, como casi o

    aportado los psicoterapeutas, los psicólogos y psiquiatras, que han querido compartir

    Elena Medinilla on

  • Thanks Jennifer, beautifully said! I, too, was introduced to tangling as an Art Therapist and consider it to be an important addition to my “toolbox” for all the reasons stated above. I also tangle for my own wellbeing, especially after witnessing a difficult session. Thank you to the Zentangle Team for this gift!!

    Alannah MacPhail on

  • This makes perfect sense to me. I have also found tangling to be helpful in overcoming physical pain, as well as restless leg syndrome.

    Joyce on

  • As a trauma informed therapist working with children and their non-offending family/caregivers in a child advocacy center in Texas, I agree with everything that Jennifer said above. Zentangle has been a great benefit to my clients to stay present and talk about their abuse.

    Kim M on

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