11 Things Painting Taught Me About Self-Love, Healing, and Heartache

I can sometimes be unkind to myself. Life is hard, and beautiful, and complex, and there are no easy answers to the hard questions. Sometimes all you want to do is give up. I remember how it felt to zone out for hours while painting when I was 7 years old. I didn’t have all the tools, skills, or supplies I have now, but I could still enter a different mind-space for hours on end, painting patterns in watercolor, recognizing the tactile sensations on my skin, thinking about things I couldn’t actually say. When I would finally get up, my legs were sore from not moving for so long. I stopped painting at age 7, and only picked up a brush again when I was 22, at what would be the start of a cold and isolated season in my life.

But what they may not know is that hope holds hands with darkness.

Most people who purchase any of my works from The Reminder Series, recognize the bright colors and serene imagery, immediately connecting them with messages of hope – the most evident interpretation of my pieces.  The process of painting hasn’t only served a creative hopeful purpose for me; it has brought me many spiritual gifts and life lessons.

Here are 11 professional, personal, and spiritual lessons I have gained from my painting journey:

1. Just start somewhere. You are allowed to start, pause, erase, rewrite or re-visit.

Sometimes in life, we don’t try new things, follow our passions, start new projects, tell people we love how we feel about them, or take the risks we want to take because we simply don’t know how to start. When I am painting and something does not work out, I am allowed to paint over it, or leave it a few days and come back with a new perspective to start again.

If we make mistakes in life, we can rewrite our story at any time. If we are stuck, or unsure, we can pause. We can start over. If you find that you never start a project, because you want to make something perfect, or have particular expectations of what it should look like, you likely won’t start anytime soon. The reality is, it doesn’t need to be perfect in order for you to start it.

When I’m teaching an art workshop, or handing out the blank canvases, I am always reminded of that initial fear I used to have, of a blank canvas staring at me, due to the expectant looks on my participant’s faces. It’s scary to not know where to start. How do I turn this blank canvas into a stunning piece of art? I can’t possibly paint! It can be daunting and make you want to give up before you even begin. I’ve learned that the end result is not everything. I have to just start anywhere, grab a piece of paper to make a list of the first few tasks, send that email, just put brush to canvas, and start moving.

I masked my pain with bright colors and detailed, serene landscapes, because I thought that’s what I was supposed to do as a good Muslim; have a lot of hope.

2. It’s okay to be vulnerable.

Painting taught me that being vulnerable is ok. I can think of only one person in the world – in the entire world – who I think knows me decently. As an introvert who has always felt like someone looking in from the outside, I can get lost in the whirlwind of my vivid, and highly-sensitive internal world. Being a very private person who feels deeply about most things, I sometimes think I am broken because I am not sure how to possibly share those thoughts and feelings with anyone outside of me. It can be overwhelming to feel so disconnected from everyone. Even though I have realized this is just who I am, and it’s O.K., in life’s toughest moments that show no sign of hope, emotions can take hold that become so heavy. Too heavy in fact, for you to possibly carry on your own – and much to my dismay, talking to others becomes a necessity. Vulnerability becomes a necessity. Learning how to be vulnerable has been, and still is, easily the most challenging thing I have had to learn how to do. How did I do this? By honoring my feelings.

3. Honor your feelings.

In many of my earlier paintings in The Reminder Series,  I masked my pain with bright colors and detailed, serene landscapes, because I thought that’s what I was supposed to do as a good Muslim; have a lot of hope. But in doing that, I denied myself my natural response to pain. I didn’t allow myself to feel my emotions, and unsurprisingly, eventually they exploded. Not once, and not just emotionally, but physically as well, over and over and over again. The only way to stop this overwhelming outpouring was to stop harming myself with false conceptions of piety and faith, and allow myself to simply be human. And being human means to have feelings – as well as expressing those feelings. I realized the only way to get better was to express myself.

4. Open the doors, not to ‘let people in,’ but to let yourself out. To free yourself.

Eventually, I started painting what I actually felt. Because I needed a safe space to be me, to accept me as I am. The art I created was drastically different from before. However, it was the scariest thing to know that someone might be able to look at it, and really understand it. Which brings me to my next point: I learned that being vulnerable was more important to me than caring what people think.

Remember that the people who judge you have a lot to learn about the world – the unkind things they may say about you is more a reflection of who they are, not who you are.

5. Trust yourself and stop caring what people think.

I know, it’s easier said than done. When you are being genuine and living your truth, or being vulnerable and making art, do it because you need to, or want to. Making art is all about being vulnerable and being yourself. Anytime you do that, you open yourself up to the possibility of rejection, criticism and hurt. Put your truth out in the world because you need it, and the world needs it. Remember that the people who judge you have a lot to learn about the world – the unkind things they may say about you is more a reflection of who they are, not who you are. If you are a “feeler” like me, and it still hurts you, allow yourself to honor the hurt, and then make a conscious decision to walk away from that pain because it is not your burden to carry- it’s theirs. Just because they have the fire of unhappiness or aggression in them doesn’t mean you have to allow it to burn your insides.

Everyone has an opinion, and ultimately it doesn’t matter what they think. Be yourself, those who need to benefit, will benefit. If no one benefits, but you are living your truth, then your truth is enough.  There are too many opinions in the world to worry about appeasing others. Be yourself. Trust yourself. Live your truth. Your priority should be you, your health, your passion, your productivity. If God is O.K. with what you are doing, don’t stop.

6. Forgive yourself, because you don’t have all the answers.

When I go back and look at a piece that I’ve made in the past that I previously thought I’d done well, I cringe sometimes. It takes some time, but I have had to learn to be kind to myself, realize what I could have improved upon, and incorporate that realization in the next piece I complete. I didn’t know the technique at the time, so I cannot be upset at myself for not creating something perfect. Similarly in life, we do our best according to what we know, and when life experiences teach us, we know better, and we do better. It’s important to forgive ourselves, and realize that we are always learning. No one has the all the answers.

You don’t owe anyone an explanation for your spirituality, or spiritual choices. Your religion is private and personal.

7. Islam is not black and white, so you do not owe anyone an explanation about your spirituality.

As I am allowing myself to be more human, I am experiencing new things, which are reflected in my art. I do not owe anyone an explanation about any piece of art, and my hope is that my viewer can take anything they need out of it. Similarly, it was initially very difficult for my heart to spiritually reconcile terrible things I was previously taught were black and white in Islam, with my newly-lived and experienced reality. No one seemed to have any answers about the questions I had about Islam, and it took me a long while to realize that I had to answer so many of them myself. That was (is) an arduous journey to say the least. Islam is not black and white. I realized there is a growing problem with the way Islam is being taught, and the primarily male lens through which it has been taught historically. You don’t owe anyone an explanation for your spirituality, or spiritual choices. Your religion is private and personal.

8. My self-worth is not defined by my productivity.

We want to make sure we are productive, that we are living a meaningful existence, but being careful not to draw our self-worth from what we create, or how much we can create, is a vital lesson I have learned. There will be times when you create in abundance, and there will be times when you can’t, for a myriad of reasons. You are not your productivity. If you find yourself working to the bone, crashing, or being antsy, anxious, or otherwise unable to relax unless you are producing something, you may want to take a break and ask yourself why. Your self-worth is not defined by your productivity.

9. Set boundaries and respect yourself.

It’s funny how people can use Islam to bully you. When I started selling my work, there was a lot of guilting in the Muslim community. Many people tried to ask for discounts, convince me my work wasn’t worth as much as it costs, but at the same time used Islam to encourage me to give it to them for free, fee-sa-beelillah.

It took time to be assertive in my speech and my standards. It took time to recognize my worth and demand respect in how I was treated.

There were a lot of people who stole my work and reproduced it for sale, “fee-sa-beelillah”. It took a long time to sift out the negative talk and negative people, to set boundaries for what kind of behavior I was willing to accept, and say “no” to people who I did not want to work with. It took time to be assertive in my speech and my standards. It took time to recognize my worth and demand respect in how I was treated. In the end, though, many of these lessons spilled over into my relationships, both personal and professional, and for that I am grateful.

10. Layers, layers, layers. Have patience to see things through.

Life is hard, and beautiful, and complex, and there are no easy answers to the hard questions. Sometimes it takes a hundred tries, and all you want to do is give up, but you try again, and it still seems like you can’t figure it out. Mental health, school, trauma, family troubles, love, marriage, children, business, and most of all, faith, can thin your hope and patience. Even so, have the patience to see things through. You will come out the other side. You are worth trying for. Just like I mentioned in point 6, sometimes I start a painting and I  just know going-in, that it will take layer, after layer, after layer of the right placement, and colors, and my best effort, before it is anywhere near done. Sometimes, I need to cover up what I painted before to correct it. Sometimes, I change my mind and decide on a better route of action. It all comes down to playing the long-term game and having patience with myself when I fall.

11. It doesn’t have to look amazing, it just has to mean something to you.

Probably one of the biggest misconceptions people who don’t paint have, is that they think painting is easy once you ‘know how to do it’. You pick up a brush, and learn some skills, and you’re well on your way to creating things. What they don’t know is that it will always be hard, and you will always be learning and fighting to create authentic art. I paint for a number of reasons. I make space for my heart to feel what it needs to feel when I cannot find that with people. I no longer judge who I am or what I create, because what I create is an authentic representation of me in whatever stage of life I am. So I am kind to myself when my art doesn’t look as expected, according to my own standards, or anyone else’s. It doesn’t have to look amazing, it just has to mean something to me. If anyone finds a message in it that they can take, I am happy I was able to give them a sense of connection in a world where we all feel a bit disconnected.