Thursday, September 19, 2024

When Zoe’s son died by suicide, Doodle Lady was born

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Six years ago, Zoe Strickland’s son, Elliot, 25, took his own life near their home in Cairns and her “universe tilted”.

The very next day – still traumatised and racked by excruciating early grief — she picked up a Sharpie pen and drew a picture. 

It would become the first entry in a series of grief diaries – some 25 notebooks’ worth – and the birth of her stick figure character, Doodle Lady.

“I journalled fervently — an outlet for the darkness, to let my pen scream, to hurl poetry at the universe,” Zoe said.

Zoe says drawing in that moment was a “very non-cerebral process”.(Supplied: Zoe Strickland)

“[Doodle Lady] wasn’t a conscious birthing, she was more an arising from the depths … she who could express my ‘grief self’, so I could carry on being me.”

Zoe wasn’t an artist, nor had she previously kept a diary, but she ended up doodling and journalling every day for about five years.

Young man and middle-aged woman sitting at a cafe table with cups of coffee, smiling

Elliot Strickland was the eldest of three boys and studying electrical engineering.(Supplied: Zoe Strickland)

She described the practice as “natural and instinctive” rather than intentional but found that, coupled with other therapy and self-care, it helped heal the pain of her son’s suicide.

“I wasn’t thinking about it at all, I was just doing it,” she said.

“When I look back, I can see why it helped — the catharsis that happens with writing and staying in the slow lane and really tending to the heart and not trying to fix things in the head.”

Over-the-shoulder photo of woman sitting at a table doodling in a notebook

Zoe says doodling and journalling helped her “befriend” her grief.(Supplied: Zoe Strickland)

The ‘swash and backwash’ of grief

The drawings range from dark and despairing to light and hopeful.

Like grief, their progression isn’t linear.

Stick figure adopting brace position with words, Brace Brace, birthdays, mothers day, fathers day, christmas day, anniversaries

Zoe says things that were very triggering early on have become less traumatic.(Supplied: Zoe Strickland)

“That’s how it is, isn’t it? There is some brutally dark stuff in hard grief,” she said.

“It’s interesting that the depths of despair can sit next to pockets of ease and lightness.”

Drawing up stick figure putting on make-up in mirror with words 'It's 6 months today and I put mascara on - is this healing?'

Zoe remembers crying while having coffee with a friend and resolving to buy waterproof mascara.(Supplied: Zoe Strickland)

Zoe’s grief — despite ups and downs — eventually softened.

She said it wasn’t just the passage of time but the work she put into her relationship with grief that helped her heal.

 with words 'Guilt, I eye up the rabbit hole but don't go in'

One of Zoe’s early doodles. She said she had to work very hard not to get swallowed up by guilt.(Supplied: Zoe Strickland)

“I think if you push it away and you hate it and you’re angry or in denial, it doesn’t make it go away. It just makes it ugly,” she said.

“It’s tending it and befriending it and accepting it.

“It’s allowing yourself to be in the dark, and to feel safe in the dark.”

Stick figure holding red love heart next to a swirl called 'grief' with the words 'hello grief, what do you need today?'

Zoe likens befriending grief to putting on night vision goggles to feel safe in the dark.(Supplied: Zoe Strickland)

To Grief With Love

Although Zoe wrote her diary for herself, she was encouraged to share her doodles more widely after posting some on social media.

Later this year she is publishing a compilation of her diary entries titled To Grief With Love.

“The book is an ode to grief, hence the title,” she said.

“I mean, I could have called it ‘Grief, for f***’s sake’ or ‘Grief WTF’, but it’s about love — pouring love into grief and pouring love into oneself.”

Two stick figures, one shaking their fists, surrounded by 'F word F word' repeated

Zoe says she could have titled her book Grief WTF such is the awful pain, chaos and despair she felt.(Supplied: Zoe Strickland)

She wants the book to offer compassion and hope to others who are bereft.

“I don’t want to depress the bejesus out of people,” she said.

“I hope the end feeling is that it’s about finding one’s way and still finding meaning in life and ultimately joy. That took a long time — joy.

“That said, I wish I hadn’t had to write any of it. I’d have him back in a heartbeat. That goes without saying.”

Stick figure sitting on a chair pouring a cup of tea

Zoe says tea is a “comforting punctuation mark” on both good and “less good” days.(Supplied: Zoe Strickland)

How art can be medicine

Drawing, painting, or working with other art forms like clay can help people process life events and express things that are “inexpressible through words alone”, says La Trobe University associate professor of art therapy Theresa Van Lith.

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“For as long as humans have been around, when there is despair, suffering, grief, humans turn to creativity,” she said.

Dr Van Lith said art could help people explore their inner world, build resilience, and quieten their mind when thoughts were overwhelming.

She said making art with the guidance of a therapist or in tandem with journalling could enhance its curative properties.

Carrying on with meaning and purpose

Zoe and her husband have since moved from Cairns to the Sunshine Coast to be closer to their other two sons and grandchildren.

She has found comfort in nature and creative pursuits, including retraining as a florist.

Zoe stopped doodling about a year ago.

Composite of woman sitting on the beach with a small dog on lap and making floral arrangement

Zoe, her husband and their dog Chubbs moved to the Sunshine Coast three years after Elliot died.(Supplied: Zoe Strickland)

She said it wasn’t necessarily a conscious decision but maybe her unconscious mind saying, “OK, that’ll do for now.”

When Elliot died, Zoe felt ripped into two — herself and her “grief self”.

“It felt like such an unnatural thing for a mother to lose her child in that way. It was unbearable,” she said.

“Perhaps [my] last doodle was myself and my ‘grief self’ coming together and we move forward together as opposed to being two people.”

‘I just miss him’

The day Doodle Lady was born, Zoe also started a second diary — one to Elliot — which she continues to write in, though not every day.

She kept the darkness out of this diary, instead writing to tell him she loves him, share family news, thoughts, and dreams about him.

Two stick figures holding an umbrella in the rain with the words, 'It's ok, I'll stand in the rain with you'

Zoe’s friend said this to her on a day she was in pain. She drew it after getting off the phone with her.(Supplied: Zoe Strickland)

“I wrote to Elliot a lot … it felt immensely comforting to keep writing to him,” she said.

The eldest of three boys, Elliot was studying electrical engineering.

“He was just a very kind person. Funny — he had a great sense of humour, a bit left field. He was a smarty pants — very intellectual,” Zoe said.

“He was into making a difference to the planet and to humans … he was a lovely, lovely soul.”

Young man sitting on railing with lake in background

Zoe tries to embody the qualities she loved in Elliot and hopes he would be proud of her.(Supplied: Zoe Strickland)

Zoe said she had to learn not to go down the rabbit holes of guilt and trying to understand why Elliot had ended his life.

“Although grief is never finished, I look back and I think I’ve travelled quite a long, long way,” she said. 

“It’s present in my head and my heart, but it doesn’t sink me — usually … I just miss him.”

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