Elaine Clayton, The Way of the Empath - Stream Drawing as a prompt for psychic insight

May 19, 2022, 07:57 PM

Empaths have a unique challenge in learning to set boundaries and embracing a lifestyle of heart-centered intelligence.

The Way of the Empath: How Compassion, Empathy, and Intuition Can Heal Your World, Elaine Clayton, Amazon.

"A guide for every empath and spiritually sensitive soul to explore their abilities with exercises, affirmations, and creative journaling, as well as methods to protect themselves."

Bio: Elaine Clayton is an artist and author/illustrator of several books for children and books for adults on empathic-intuitive intelligence. Elaine teaches intuitive development using creative-meditation drawing methods.

Amazon Review - 5.0 out of 5 stars - How to know if you are an Empath
Thank you for writing this book on being an empath. You have helped me to better understand what I am feeling and experiencing. I am often overwhelmed by all of the information coming at me from all sides. I will take to heart and practice what you are teaching to harness my experiences. Learn how to weed out the negativity, to recognize what is mine and someone else’s. What an eye and heart opener your book is. It was just what I needed to read right now with everything going on in the world.

I interviewed Elaine for a previous book, Making Marks and had fun sharing some of my drawings. This time she talks about that first discovery of drawing an image for a client and discovering her new ability to use drawing as a PSI/psychic prompt.

As it happened, I had just rescued a bird from drowning. We talk about how our connections with others sometimes put us in unique situations.

Elaine's Website:
Wendy's Blog. I'll post the picture of the bird there too.
I did post it on Facebook. He was soaked, cold and limp when I fished him out of the lake. Took awhile before he started to blink his eyes. Photo shows his feathers fluffed. He had recovered after more than half an hour in my hand. (Energy/Reiki) He flew off shortly after. Big relief when we saw him visit the feeder.