About this episode
What if the mess you've been avoiding is actually the doorway?In this episode, host Nina Rodriguez sits down with transformational creativity and grief coach Susie Stonefield to explore the powerful connection between grief and creative expression. Susie believes creativity isn't a luxury or a talent reserved for the few. It's a birthright. And in times of loss and healing, it can become one of our most powerful companions.Together, they explore how art-making without rules, outcomes, or expectations creates space for emotional healing and truth to surface. They move through grief in its many forms: the death of loved ones, identity shifts, coming out later in life, complicated emotions like anger and guilt, and the collective grief so many of us carry in uncertain times.Susie shares her personal journey through loss and self-discovery, and how those experiences shaped the judgment-free spaces she now holds for others through one-on-one grief coaching and intimate small group "Deep Dives." Her work lives at the intersection of mess and meaning. The messiness of life, she says, isn't something to clean up. It's something to honor.This episode is an invitation to anyone navigating loss, identity, or the quiet ache of feeling stuck. Pick up the art supplies. Feel what's there. Make something from it. Not to fix grief, but to sit beside it.This episode explores:Why creativity is a powerful companion to griefThe myth that only “artists” are creativeGrief beyond death: identity shifts, coming out later in life, and life transitionsArt journaling as a cathartic emotional practiceCreating safe, judgment-free spaces for vulnerabilityHonoring anger, guilt, and the full emotional spectrumThe impact of collective grief in today’s worldFinding joy alongside sorrow through creative expressionWhy sharing our stories fosters connection and healingReflection Invitation:What emotion have I been trying to tidy up instead of express?What would it look like to create without needing it to be “good”?What might emerge if I gave myself permission to make something from my grief?Connect with Susie Stonefield:susiestonefield.comBook a Discovery CallFREEBIE: Grief & Creativity WorkbookThe Geography of GriefMilton Marks Family CampSend us Fan MailSu