top of page
Image by Dana DeVolk
Your paragraph text (3).png
Your paragraph text (4).png

Cultivating trauma-informed communities of mindful, thoughtful, and hopeful people through expressive arts and education

Your paragraph text (5).png
Your paragraph text (5).png

The hard things we go through in life—traumatic experiences, mental health struggles, physical health battles, grief, loss, addiction, and more—often take more from us than we realize. They rob us of our sense of agency, our joy, and, perhaps most profoundly, our ability to create. Creativity is an intrinsic part of being human and it is spiritual; it’s how we process, express, make sense of the world, and contribute to making it better. When we create, we are at our most whole. But when life becomes overwhelming, our creative energy can feel drained, locked behind walls of exhaustion, fear, shame, and uncertainty. Our voices are silenced. Our capacity to imagine beyond the immediate is clouded. We lose the motivation to engage in the things we once loved. We exist in a state of survival. This loss of creativity—of our ability to imagine, to dream, to create—can feel like the loss of ourselves.






 

Yet, in the process of healing, creativity can be RECLAIMED! It’s not about returning to who we were before the pain, but about discovering new ways to experience and express ourselves around the pain—new forms of creativity that emerge from the cracks and scars. Healing is a journey of proximity with ourselves, others, the world, and perhaps a higher power—slowly allowing ourselves to reconnect, recover, and rejuvenate. Through self-care, support, and trauma-informed care, we can begin to restore the creative selves that trauma and hardship once took from us. Creativity becomes not just a means of self-expression, but a powerful tool for rebuilding, for connecting with our humanity, and for finding hope and meaning in the places we once thought were lost.

294533816_756718408802107_6124913821750897715_n.jpg


Some of the things I am include being a Licensed Master Social Worker, an Artist, and a Florist- and each of these roles reflects a deep part of who I am and what I believe in.
 
Proximity LLC was born out of my own life experiences and healing journey, and has become my way of giving back to others who are struggling just like me. 
​
I provide services in education and expressive arts from a Trauma Informed Care and Self Care perspective in order to help facilitate ways we can all help each other, especially survivors, build resilience, reclaim creativity, and find healing. 
​
I am so honored you are here and I would love to connect with you.

 

(she/her/hers)

Your paragraph text (8).png

Education:
Trainings/
Speaking/
Consultations

Read More >

Expressive Arts: Therapeutic Classes 

Read More >

Floral Design/ Preservation
and Stylings

Art Gallery/Shop and Community Blog

Your paragraph text (6).png
Image by Dana DeVolk
Your paragraph text (7).png

"I attended art classes with Natalie while I was in college during a high-stress season of my life. Natalie taught me basic art principles while maintaining a calm presence and giving gentle instruction. She allowed me to be creative and to implement my own ideas in my work. I have continued to benefit from this time over the years as I’ve learned to reduce stress and anxiety through art."

-E  from Upstate, South Carolina

bottom of page