Writing is Therapy: The Ultimate Shadow Work & Transformation

"I can tell how you live your life by how you write."


Before the beauty, there is the mess. Before the clarity, there is the chaos. And before the truth emerges, there is the silence you sit in, waiting, staring, wondering if what lives inside you has any place on the page.

Writing brings all of it to the surface.

The monkey mind. The inner critic. The shame. The belief that everyone else has permission except you. That what you say will never come out right. That the blank page is proof you have nothing worth saying.

And still, you want to write.

You want to slow your thoughts into sentences. You want to stay with a feeling long enough to know what it means. You want to reclaim the parts of yourself that were shamed for speaking out or laughed at for being too much. You want to write through what you’ve spent years avoiding. And you want that writing to mean something — to someone, but mostly to you.

This desire is not a whim. It’s a signal.

It’s the voice of your soul, the same one that has quietly observed your disappointments, your longings, your untold stories, and still believes there is something worth exploring. Worth saying. Worth saving.

As Julia Cameron writes in The Artist’s Way, “Creativity is an act of faith. It assumes that there is a self that wants to be born.” The practice of writing, especially the daily ritual of Morning Pages, becomes a way to meet that self again and again, layer by layer, day by day.

But the first thing you meet on the page is rarely beauty. It’s resistance.

It shows up as procrastination, judgment, comparison. It tells you you’re too late, too unoriginal, too self-indulgent. It sounds like every voice that ever told you to be quiet. Every teacher who corrected your expression instead of celebrating your voice. Every adult who said you were too sensitive, too dramatic, too much.

Writing, real writing, is how we confront all of that.

It’s not an escape from the self. It’s a returning.

As Natalie Goldberg reminds us, “Write what disturbs you, what you fear, what you have not been willing to speak about. Be willing to be split open.” Her approach to writing — raw, intimate, grounded in the body — invites us to stay honest with the discomfort. To use writing as a tool for both revelation and transformation.

Because if you stay with it, if you keep showing up to the page, something starts to shift. Writing worms its way in. It breaks through performance and taps the nerve of something real. A sentence catches you off guard. A memory returns without warning. You tell the truth without planning to. That truth leads to another, and another.

In that unfolding, you begin to recognize something: a voice. Not the voice you were taught to use for approval, but the one that has been buried under years of adaptation, survival, and self-editing. You begin to write like your life depends on it. Because, in many ways, it does.

“The creative process is a process of surrender, not control,” Julia Cameron says. And this surrender is the beginning of shadow work.

Shadow work doesn’t always announce itself as grand catharsis. Often, it slips in as a quiet moment of self-awareness. A sudden sting of memory. A realization that you’ve been living someone else’s expectations. When you write with honesty, not for perfection but for truth, you start to meet these parts of yourself. You begin to remember.

You write to remember what you loved as a child before the world told you it was silly. You write to understand why you stay quiet when you want to scream. You write to explore the grief you’ve carried, the rage you’ve buried, the joy you never allowed yourself to fully feel. And in doing so, you rewrite the story.

Natalie Goldberg’s advice, “Go for the jugular,” is not about drama. It’s about precision. About finding the pulse of what matters and daring to stay there.

Writing is how we metabolize what we haven’t yet been able to say out loud. It is how we integrate the exiled parts of the psyche: the orphaned child, the angry teenager, the grieving adult. We bring them home through the act of telling. Each time we do, the self expands. The shame shrinks. The voice strengthens.

This isn’t about discovering some grand, finished truth. It’s about the ongoing unveiling of what has always been waiting. The writing changes you. And as you change, the writing deepens. You begin to recognize your own voice. You start to trust it. Not because you’ve mastered craft, but because you’ve stopped trying to prove yourself.

A closed loop begins to form. A sacred cycle. Clarity brings more honesty. Honesty brings better writing. Better writing brings you home to yourself.

Stephen King once said, “Writing is not life, but I think that sometimes it can be a way back to life.” For those who have gone numb, who have lost themselves in caregiving, in performance, in obligation, writing can be a lifeline.

It can return you to the center of your own existence.

Not in a narcissistic way, but in a soulful way. You begin to remember that your story matters. That your way of seeing is worth recording. That there is something sacred in the ordinary. You see with new eyes, your own.

As you keep going, you’ll learn how to stay present with discomfort. How to be gentle as you survey new territory. How to sit with incomplete thoughts, fragments of memory, the sting of old criticism, and the slow emergence of something new.

You’ll meet the parts of yourself that were once silenced, shamed, or ignored, and invite them back into the story. You’ll begin to notice where you’ve been performing your life, and where you’re ready to inhabit it with truth.

This can be disorienting.

You may feel the tension of transition. The ache of becoming. But inside that ache, something rare emerges: devotion. Not to writing for recognition, or for output, or for applause, but writing because something in you has finally remembered what it means to be alive.

Henry Miller understood this when he wrote, “The function of the writer is to reveal the truth about the human condition, not to escape it.” Writing does not lift you out of life. It roots you deeper into it. Into the questions. The contradictions. The body. The moment.

And that’s where transformation lives.

Not in clarity alone, but in the willingness to keep returning to the unknown. To say what hasn’t yet been said. To meet yourself in real time, flawed, open, and unfinished.

Over time, you stop writing to be seen and start writing to see.

To see what you think, what you feel, what you need. To see where the past still echoes and where the future wants to unfold. To see the truth of what it means to be you, right now, with everything you carry and everything you hope to become.

You may write through grief. Through longing. Through doubt and rage and joy. And you may find that you are not alone in any of it. That by writing your truth, you’ve tapped into something shared. And that shared recognition, even if it’s only between you and the page, is medicine.

The more you write, the clearer you become. And the clearer you become, the deeper your writing goes. It’s a cycle that changes everything.

And while you may begin this journey to heal, you’ll end up creating something far more lasting: a life anchored in awareness. A practice of radical honesty. A relationship with yourself that no one can take away.

This is not just therapy.

This is art.

This is soul work.

This is how you come home.


The Writer's Life

Stop Waiting for Permission

Time to Write.

Karen is completing her second book this year, and we're brain storming the teacher's workbook to be published simultaneously, in the fall.

I don't teach you how to write or what to write, although this happens automatically during the process of you creating a life of writing.

The Writer's Life:

There are two and four month programs to get you started.

Email me: brenda@brendalittleton.com for details.


Somatic-Based Active Imagination

July 2025 is the last month for Three-Session @ Discount Fees

July is the last month I'm offering a deep discount, three-session package.

Somatic Active Imagination: A Jungian Coaching Journey Back to the Body.

“Heal the freeze, free the dream.”

This is not just therapeutic coaching. It’s coming back home.

(Continued Below)…

Slow down. Listen. Learn to trust again.

This work is grounded in the understanding that your body remembers—the truths you had to forget, the instincts you were taught to ignore, the sorrow that never had words. Symptoms, stuckness, and anxiety aren’t flaws. They are signals. And when we learn to listen, what was once confusing becomes coherent.

In this course, we slow down. We listen. We learn to trust again.

“You’ve done the healing work. But something still lingers waiting for your attention.”

You’ve read the books, tried the mindset shifts, meditated, manifested, maybe even burned some sage.

And still—

The same money fears circle back.

The same relationship patterns repeat.

The same creative project gathers dust.

Not because you’re doing it wrong.

But because something older is still running the show.

I help people work at the level beneath talk therapy, affirmations, or action plans.

We meet the pattern at its root—through the body, the imagination, and the unconscious.

The bigger the block, the deeper the release.

How It Works:

You’ll begin with a 3-session package, introduction into Somatic Active Imagination. This is a chance to explore the work at half the normal fee, with no long-term commitment required. Perfect for those new to this process or returning after time away.

In these sessions, you’ll learn how to:

Dialogue with your body through Jungian active imagination

• Calm the nervous system so that insight doesn't overwhelm, but integrates

• Transform freeze states into embodied clarity and forward movement

This isn’t about “fixing” yourself. It’s about coming home to the Self that has been waiting.

This is Jungian-somatic work for people ready to stop circling the same terrain.

If you’re ready to meet what’s really behind the fear, fatigue, or freeze—and let it transform you—

I can help.

For over thirty years, I've helped people through frustration, unresolved emotion, and overwhelm, first as a university professor in graduate studies, then as a Jungian therapist working with creatives and executives, and now as a Jungian coach helping clients uncover the deeper intelligence behind and under their unknown Self, their dreams, their longings.

This isn’t mindset coaching.

It’s embodied soul work.

And it works—because it meets you where words end, and wisdom begins.

If you are ready for the next phase of your creative, joyous and available life, then let's start with a short program where you can feel the change, and learn somatic active imagination.

Send me a private message or email at brenda@brendalittleton.com.


March 24 - April 2, 2025

Brenda Littleton is a guest speaker at the upcoming Radiant Mastery Summit:

Radiant Mastery Summit

Divine Guidance for Women Entrepreneurs

How to Initiate, Recognize, and Follow Your Intuition in Business and Life
Starts at 12 a.m. MST/Arizona/USA
Pre-recorded video interviews, 2 interviews per 24-hour period
10 days = 19 interviews + Irina's Miracle Story
Watch at your convenience. Free Access!

radiantmastery.com/summit

 

 
Brenda Littleton with her created art

Exclusive coaching from a depth psychological perspective.

In these times, we need to return to our core for guidance, solace and clarity, a place where the world can finds its way back to you. As we choose to be conscious of what we want to change in the outer world, we also need to be conscious of what we want to change in our inner self, as well.  When we ignore and dismiss a personal dream, a creative desire, a family vision, a community project, a business goal, a spiritual inquiry, an environmental rescue, we choose to silence our soul. We’ve had enough of silenced souls.

"If you listen, you will hear the work calling you; if you act, you will see your soul in action.”
— Brenda Littleton


INTERESTED IN LEARNING MORE ABOUT MY INDIVIDUALIZED AND GROUP WORKSHOPS?

PLEASE CLICK HERE TO CONTACT ME.


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"So long as we are not in contact with our own potential, we are vulnerable to being controlled by others.

If we do not know ourselves, we cannot stand to our own truth and are, therefore, in constant danger of invasion by others."

-- Marion Woodman