Healing High Art: Difference between revisions

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(Created page with "At key locations, place exceptional pieces of high art based on concepts vital to trauma recovery and general mental health. Throughout the environment, several pieces Haven House and Cloud Nine feature several exceptional pieces of high art that are based on very specific concepts vital to trauma recovery and mental health. In both cases, these pieces have been placed extremely carefully to maximize their impact. Since Haven House is a shared living environment,...")
 
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Haven House and Cloud Nine feature several exceptional pieces of high art that are based on very specific concepts vital to trauma recovery and mental health.  
Haven House and Cloud Nine feature several exceptional pieces of high art that are based on very specific concepts vital to trauma recovery and mental health.  


In both cases, these pieces have been placed extremely carefully to maximize their impact.
These pieces have been chosen and placed extremely carefully to maximize their impact.




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For example, "What Shines Through" is hung in the Haven House office, which every resident visits at least once a day. But it is hung in a space where it's only seen for a brief moment before being passed. This is by design because the message the piece illustrates—that positivity is a choice—is vital for everyone in trauma recovery to learn before they leave. However, this message would be counterproductively harmful to deliver to someone at the beginning of their therapy program, when they are presumably near their lowest. After surviving severe trauma and suffering the effects for a long time, being told that you need to choose positivity can appear hopelessly naïve or worse, like victim-blaming. But since this lesson must eventually be learned, instead of hanging it anywhere it could be stared at and meditated upon for long periods, it's in the only spot where everyone will see it regularly, but not for very long. That way, they can be repeatedly exposed to it for brief durations, so that when their mental state improves to the point where they can be receptive to the concept, they can recognize and accept it.
For example, "What Shines Through" is hung in the Haven House office, which every resident visits at least once a day. But it is hung in a space where it's only seen for a brief moment before being passed. This is by design because the message the piece illustrates—that positivity is a choice—is vital for everyone in trauma recovery to learn before they leave. However, this message would be counterproductively harmful to deliver to someone at the beginning of their therapy program, when they are presumably near their lowest. After surviving severe trauma and suffering the effects for a long time, being told that you need to choose positivity can appear hopelessly naïve or worse, like victim-blaming. But since this lesson must eventually be learned, instead of hanging it anywhere it could be stared at and meditated upon for long periods, it's in the only spot where everyone will see it regularly, but not for very long. That way, they can be repeatedly exposed to it for brief durations, so that when their mental state improves to the point where they can be receptive to the concept, they can recognize and accept it.


On the other hand, "Heart Says Go; Gut Says No" is a piece that shows a woman at peace with her conflicting emotions,
On the other hand, "Heart Says Go; Gut Says No" is a painting that shows a woman at peace with her conflicting emotions. This powerful piece promotes healthy emotional regulation and encourages women to honor their instincts and protect themselves, especially when they sense danger—a vital message since so many societal mechanisms pressure women to ignore their own feelings and sacrifice their own safety and security in order to please others.
learn to honor their instincts and protect themselves / especially when they sense danger
a vital message since so many societal mechanisms pressure women to ignore their own emotions and reactions and sacrifice their own safety and security in order to please others.


This piece is by the front door, as that is the portal between the home  
This piece is hung by the front door, as traveling through the portal between the home and the outside world triggers a mental reset, and reinforcing the idea of honoring and regulating one's emotions is a vital when coming home to interact their housemates, leaving the home to go to therapy or elsewhere out in the world.
to both honor and regulate your emotions is a vital when coming home to interact their housemates, leaving the home to go to therapy or elsewhere out in the world.





Revision as of 23:27, 3 July 2025

At key locations, place exceptional pieces of high art based on concepts vital to trauma recovery and general mental health.

Throughout the environment, several pieces

Haven House and Cloud Nine feature several exceptional pieces of high art that are based on very specific concepts vital to trauma recovery and mental health.

These pieces have been chosen and placed extremely carefully to maximize their impact.


Since Haven House is a shared living environment, these works are primarily in the common areas of the home.

For example, "What Shines Through" is hung in the Haven House office, which every resident visits at least once a day. But it is hung in a space where it's only seen for a brief moment before being passed. This is by design because the message the piece illustrates—that positivity is a choice—is vital for everyone in trauma recovery to learn before they leave. However, this message would be counterproductively harmful to deliver to someone at the beginning of their therapy program, when they are presumably near their lowest. After surviving severe trauma and suffering the effects for a long time, being told that you need to choose positivity can appear hopelessly naïve or worse, like victim-blaming. But since this lesson must eventually be learned, instead of hanging it anywhere it could be stared at and meditated upon for long periods, it's in the only spot where everyone will see it regularly, but not for very long. That way, they can be repeatedly exposed to it for brief durations, so that when their mental state improves to the point where they can be receptive to the concept, they can recognize and accept it.

On the other hand, "Heart Says Go; Gut Says No" is a painting that shows a woman at peace with her conflicting emotions. This powerful piece promotes healthy emotional regulation and encourages women to honor their instincts and protect themselves, especially when they sense danger—a vital message since so many societal mechanisms pressure women to ignore their own feelings and sacrifice their own safety and security in order to please others.

This piece is hung by the front door, as traveling through the portal between the home and the outside world triggers a mental reset, and reinforcing the idea of honoring and regulating one's emotions is a vital when coming home to interact their housemates, leaving the home to go to therapy or elsewhere out in the world.


which is a particularly



"Heart Says





Art can cause reactions, be they immediate chemical, short-term emotional, or long-term cognitive.


The right art, to the right person, at the right time can have




At Haven House, these works are distributed throughout the home


Throughout the environment


At Cloud Nine Studios,


Strategically placed art


This is a difficult and time-consuming strategy to execute, as such art is exceedingly rare; all there is to say about my future plans for this strategy is that I’ll keep looking and bring them up if and when I find more. Such pieces are also usually expensive. However, high art commands attention and can communicate complex thoughts and emotions in ways that words cannot.

While expensive, the value of these works of art can be compared to the value of a low-dose, high-frequency therapeutic pharmaceutical. Amortized over enough time, certain art could provide a greater therapeutic benefit per dollar, especially when considering the lack of side effects, interactions, and administration costs even before considering that certain art can provide unique, targeted benefits that drugs cannot. Intended goals would vary piece by piece.

There are over a dozen pieces of high art in Haven House, eight of which are exceptionally strong and overtly about mental health. I’d go over them all, but I could talk for 15 minutes about each piece.

Which is a good segue, because the therapeutic efficacy of these pieces can be exponentially enhanced by combining it with...

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