We recently connected with REJI MATHEW and have shared our conversation below.
REJI , looking forward to hearing all of your stories today. Can you share an anecdote or story from your schooling/training that you feel illustrates what the overall experience was like?
In my expressive training, I have built a broad palette: for art, I work with digital animation, drawing, and sketching as my visual processing tools. For writing and poetry, my background in journalistic writing helps me understand how narratives are constructed and re-imagined.
My storytelling is informed by my education in academia, mental health, social work, and community advocacy. I am currently the Arts Reporter for the Disastershock Arts & Recovery team and am curating a narrative on the role of the arts in trauma recovery.
In drama, I specialize in using improv as a tool to cultivate spontaneity. I also have a passion for cinema therapy, using short films as a tool for processing complex emotions. Lastly, dance/movement and music are intertwined expressive forms for me. As a disability and accessibility advocate, I have both studied and witnessed firsthand the power of music, movement, and imagery as a resource in neuro-medical-rehabilitation recovery. The Dance for PD (Parkinson’s Disease) model is a powerful source of inspiration for me, informing my creative process and philosophy.
In my expressive arts training, I have also learned that each person has an expressive range, and methods of therapeutic expressive play can be a path for self-expansion, problem-solving, and developmental growth. In 2020, I received an ARTS Leadership award from BRIDGES, the Rockland Independent Living Center, for my community-based arts initiatives.
As a street academic, I present in settings ranging from non-profits to hospitals, primarily speaking on providing mental health coping skills education with culturally affirming attunement. I collaborate with various communities to teach evidence-based psychotherapy models integrated with an expressive approach to healing and well-being.
For my own arts-based work, I am an intermodal artist. My current art practice includes arts advocacy and art creation. My art installations are intermodal, and I create work in several mediums: visual, narrative, animation, and live spoken-word performance. My art explores themes of wonder, resiliency, and expressive play. I am a board member of BRIDGES, the Rockland Independent Living Center, and on the advisory board for Rockland Music Conservatory. I am honored to be the Arts Accessibility Educator and Activist for Anti-Racists Art Teachers.
Expressive arts are my lifelong path of healing, discovery, and integrating mind, body, spirit, and imagination. The mission of my work is to teach the benefits of cultivating inner artistry as a direct problem-solving tool to bring to life challenges. I live my daily life with the spirit of this mission.
Great, appreciate you sharing that with us. Before we ask you to share more of your insights, can you take a moment to introduce yourself and how you got to where you are today to our readers.
The expressive arts are central to my worldview, work, life, and social activism. I am an award-winning intermodal artist, thinker, educator, and neuroscience-informed psychotherapist. Integrating different art forms is intrinsic to my creative process and therapeutic approach. My philosophy for therapeutic expressive arts is grounded in several core principles that inform my approach to healing, teaching, and training.
My therapeutic worldview is based on narratology and narrative therapy. This intersects with a commitment to understanding our complex identities, including class, culture, location, gender, race, ethnicity, religion, sexual orientation, and accessibility. I begin my understanding of a person in the context of time, place, and culture.
Human experience can sometimes defy language, and the arts can provide the safety of aesthetic distance and limitless accessible entry points through movement, sound, story, art, and imagination to find one’s personal narrative. In the expressive arts, intermodal is a concept that offers the arts as processing tools. The “intermodal invitation” conceptualization guides my counseling approach; specifically, how does this person or community enter their inner world?
My graduate education in social work, cultural studies, and community health at New York University shaped my therapeutic framework. I specialize in evidence-based treatment approaches, such as cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT), dialectical behavior therapy (DBT), acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT), interpersonal psychotherapy (IPT), mindfulness, positive psychology (PP), resiliency, and mind-body wellness. My approach is also trauma-informed, and I have trained in eye movement desensitization reprocessing (EMDR).
Can you share a story from your journey that illustrates your resilience?
I am a person with a lifelong neuromuscular disability (chair user). I am an intermodal artist, thinker, and educator. Expressive arts are my lifelong path of healing, discovery, and integrating mind, body, spirit, and imagination. The mission of my work is to teach the benefits of cultivating inner artistry as a direct problem-solving tool to bring to life challenges.
Each day, I move through the world relying on my artistic aesthetic sensibility. Inner musicality is a metaphor to think about the nuances in problem-solving, Visual arts help me have a broad imagination. My dramatic instincts bring out a sense of playfulness and serve as a balm in conflict situations. The Expressive Arts are an inner resource for me and the mission of my work is to inspire people to cultivate inner artistry as a tool to bring to the challenges of daily life.
I live my daily life with the spirit of this mission.
How about pivoting – can you share the story of a time you’ve had to pivot?
Having a neuromuscular condition and relying on a complex set of mobility/adaptive equipment is a constant challenge in affirmative coping and accessing my inner resilience. When I realized that every year or so as my condition evolved and my body changed, I had to accept that evolving the way I move an live is the world is a journey of accepting pivoting as a way of life.
To face this challenge with more creativity, I spent time learning more about improvisation through dance and music classes which shifted the paradigm for me to think of every day as choreographic improvisational challenge and not only a stressor.
Contact Info:
- Website: https://www.rejimathewphd-writer.com/
- Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/rejimathewwriter/
- Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/reji.mathew2
- Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/rejimathewphd/
- Twitter: https://twitter.com/rmwriter
- Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCyvA4lUl4Ku2aalaQbWTfoQ
- Other: Tumblr – Expressive Arts For Kids Blog –https://positivity-and-health-for-kids.tumblr.com/
- Reporters Notebook, Disastershock.com – https://www.disastershock.com/
reporter-s-notebook - Dance for Health, Disastershock.com – https://www.disastershock.com/
about-3-2 - Arts Accessibility – ARAT – Anti-Racist Art Teachers – https://www.
antiracistartteachers.org/ arts-accessibility
Image Credits
Stefanie Livanos