Crafting is Good For You!

About 4 years ago I started having health problems. In 2014 I had 4 surgeries- knees and shoulders. The shoulder surgeries made crafting difficult for about a year. Family circumstances changed 3 years ago and one of my kid's families moved in for nearly a year. During that year I was without the use of my craft room. In July of 2016, my normally low blood pressure was at 179 0ver 99 with tachycardia, I found this out the hard way... I passed out while driving! After numerous tests (costing thousands of dollars) with a cardiologist, all that was found was a very healthy heart, but my symptoms were ongoing. Again things change my daughter bought a house and her family moved out and that same month my son married and moved out. I had my craft room back and started creating again. The more I created the more my blood pressure and heart normalized. Today I craft daily and no longer have those health problems, my cardiologist has said that apparently, I need to craft to live!

I found this article interesting considering what I found to be true for myself.
 From the article:
Crafting can help those who suffer from anxiety, depression or chronic pain, experts say. It may also ease stress, increase happiness and protect the brain from damage caused by aging.
Little research has been done specifically on crafting, but neuroscientists are beginning to see how studies on cognitive activities such as doing crossword puzzles might also apply to someone who does complex quilting patterns. Others are drawing connections between the mental health benefits of meditation and the zen reached while painting or sculpting.
"There's promising evidence coming out to support what a lot of crafters have known anecdotally for quite some time," says Catherine Carey Levisay, a clinical neuropsychologist and wife of Craftsy.com CEO John Levisay. "And that's that creating -- whether it be through art, music, cooking, quilting, sewing, drawing, photography (or) cake decorating -- is beneficial to us in a number of important ways."
The article is worth reading. I tell my husband that my crafting supplies are much cheaper than a nuclear perfusion study or an echocardiogram, just two of the tests that were run.

I found a second article on the benefits of crafting!

In Our Brutal Modern World, Science Shows Our Brains Need Craft More Than Ever

Not just another fad.
SUSAN LUCKMAN, THE CONVERSATION
28 JUL 2018

At a time when many of us feel overwhelmed by the 24/7 demands of the digital world, craft practices, alongside other activities such as colouring books for grown-ups and the up-surge of interest in cooking from scratch and productive home gardens, are being looked to as something of an antidote to the stresses and pressures of modern living.
Crafts such as knitting, crochet, weaving, ceramics, needlework and woodwork focus on repetitive actions and a skill level that can always be improved upon.
According to the famous psychologist Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi this allows us to enter a "flow" state, a perfect immersive state of balance between skill and challenge.
With what is increasingly referred to today as "mindfulness" being a much-desired quality for many people, it's not surprising crafts are being sought out for their mental and even physical benefits.
Craft as therapy
For over a century, arts and craft-based activity have been a core part of occupational therapy that emerged as a distinct health field around the end of the first world war in response to the needs of returned soldiers.
This includes many suffering from what we now refer to as post-traumatic stress disorder, but then referred to as "shell shock".
Knitting, basket weaving, and other craft activities were commonplace in the repatriation support offered throughout much of the English-speaking world to the returned veterans of the two world wars.
This was as both diversional therapy (taking your mind off pain and negative thoughts), as well as skills-development geared towards re-entering the civilian workforce.
More recently, research is seeking to better understand just how craft is so beneficial for the body and mind. Interestingly, much of the focus has been on the mental healthand well-being brought about by knitting.
The benefits of craft according to science
large-scale international online survey of knitters found respondents reported they derived a wide range of perceived psychological benefits from the practice: relaxation; relief from stress; a sense of accomplishment; connection to tradition; increased happiness; reduced anxiety; enhanced confidence, as well as cognitive abilities (improved memory, concentration and ability to think through problems).
In more clinical contexts, introducing knitting into the lives of hospital patients with anorexia nervosa led to a self-reported reduction in anxious preoccupation with eating disorder thoughts and feelings.
Some 74 percent of research participants described feeling "distracted" or "distanced" from these negative emotional and cognitive states, as well as more relaxed and comfortable.
Over half said they felt less stressed, a feeling of accomplishment, and less likely to act on their "ruminating thoughts".
In another study, knitting was found to reduce workplace stress and compassion fatigue experienced by oncology nurses.
Quilting has been found to enhance participant's experiences of well-being as they move into older age.
Research reports quilters find the work challenging, cognitively demanding, it helps to maintain or generate new skills, and working with colour was found to be uplifting, especially in winter.
In studies of people with chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS/ME), depression and other long-term health problems, textile crafts were found to increase sufferers' self-esteem, their engagement with the wider world, and increase their personal sense of well-being and their ability to live positively with their condition.
While knitting and other textile-based activities tend to be female-dominated, similar benefits have been found for men in the collective woodworking, repair and other productive tinkering activities of the Men's Sheds movement.
Participants reported reduced levels of depression.
Why does craft make us feel good?
What unites almost all of these studies, is that while the practice of craft, especially those such as knitting, quilting, needlework and woodworking, may at first appear to be relatively private activities, the benefits also substantially arise from the social connections craft enables.
These have even been reported across whole communities impacted by disaster, such as the recovery following the 2011 Christchurch earthquake.
One of the strengths of craft practice, especially as a contributor to well-being, is precisely that it can be both solitary and collective, and it's up to the individual to decide.
For the shy, the ill, or those suffering from various forms of social anxiety, this control, as well as the capacity to draw away any uncomfortable focus upon themselves and instead channel this into the process of making, is a much valued quality of their craft practice.
The research into the physical and mental health benefits of craft remains largely qualitative and based on self-reporting.
And it especially explores its capacity to generate positive health outcomes through positive mental health.
While there's much more work to be done here, it's clear craft continues to play a key role in enhancing the quality of life of those who participate in its practices.
Susan Luckman, Professor of Cultural Studies, University of South Australia.

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