Soul-led Creative Women with Sam Horton
Welcome to Soul-Led Creative Women — the podcast for heart-centred, creative women who are ready to infuse more soul, depth and meaning into their art and their life.
I’m Sam Horton — artist + creative & spiritual mentor, and I’m here to support women like you who want to use their creative practice to fuel their personal and spiritual growth.
Each episode is an invitation to uncover the spiritual power of creativity to heal, nurture, empower, and transform. Through honest stories, soulful conversations, and inspiring tools, we’ll explore how Soulful Creativity can guide you home to your inner world, help you reconnect to your truth, and give you a safe, expressive, meaningful way to honour your soul’s desires.
Soul-led Creative Women with Sam Horton
Gathering Creative Gold: The Power of Witnessing Your Art | Sam Horton
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FOR EPISODE LINKS & MORE INFO VISIT: https://samhorton.co/blog/ep106
What if the most powerful part of your creative practice isn’t when you’re making… but when you pause long enough to truly witness what you’ve created?
3 Powerful Benefits of Listening
- Learn how to deepen your inner connection through the simple but transformative practice of witnessing your art
- Understand why symbols, emotions, and meaning in your work often reveal themselves over time, not in the moment of creation
- Discover how slowing down with your creativity can support healing, presence, and a more soulful creative practice
Episode Summary
So many women move quickly from one piece of art to the next, or rush to judge, fix, or share what they’ve created… without ever truly sitting with it. But in a soul led creative practice, the process doesn’t end when the artwork is finished. In many ways, that’s where the deeper journey begins.
In this episode, I explore the quiet and powerful practice of witnessing your art. We talk about what it really means to sit with your work without judgement, how meaning and symbolism can unfold slowly over time, and why this stage of the creative process is essential for integration, healing, and self connection.
This is an invitation to slow down, to listen, and to allow your art to become a mirror… gently revealing the truths, patterns, and messages your soul is ready for you to see.
Key Takeaways
- Creation is only one part of a soulful creative practice, witnessing is where deeper wisdom and integration live
- You don’t need to analyse your art to understand it, presence and openness allow meaning to emerge naturally
- Symbols and patterns often appear unconsciously and reveal their meaning over time
- Witnessing your work helps cultivate patience, presence, and emotional awareness
- Your art can act as a mirror, reflecting your inner world, desires, and healing
- Slowing down with your creativity supports deeper connection to your truth and your creative voice
- You are not just observing your art, you are learning to witness yourself with compassion
Reflection Question
If your artwork could speak… what might it be gently asking you to notice right now?
FOR EPISODE LINKS & MORE INFO VISIT: https://samhorton.co/blog/ep106
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The themes and practices in this episode are glimpses of tools we explore deeply in my new online program, Empowered Creative Soul. For more info and VIP access when doors open, please join the waitlist at https://samhorton.co/ECS-waitlist
Ep 106: Gathering Creative Gold: The Power of Witnessing Your Art
[00:00:00] So today's episode is, uh, really gentle but powerful invitation. We're going to explore the practice of witnessing your art and why the moments after you create might actually be the most important part of your creative process. If you've ever felt like you move too quickly from one piece to the next, or you're not quite sure what your art is trying to say, or you feel like there's something deeper available to you in your creativity, but you can't quite access it yet.
This episode is for you because today you're going to discover how slowing down and sitting with your art can deepen your connection to yourself in ways that creating alone cannot. Why the symbols, emotions, and meanings inside your work often reveal themselves over time, not in the moment of making.
And how witnessing your art can become a powerful practice of presence, helping you feel more grounded, more connected, and more in tune with your inner truth. [00:01:00] This is such a simple shift, but it has the power to completely transform your creative practice. So I honestly believe that, witnessing your art is one of the most overlooked parts of a creative practice.
And yet it is one of the most powerful. It's not about analyzing your art or judging it, uh, but simply sitting with it and allowing it to speak to you. Allowing meaning to unfold slowly over time. Because the truth is, most people think the creative process ends when the artwork is finished, but in a soulful, creative practice, this is often when the deeper process begins.
I think many of us have been conditioned to rush. We live in a world that values productivity, output, and momentum, and that energy can very easily creep into our creative lives. We finish a piece and instead of pausing, we might photograph it, [00:02:00] share it, critique it, or start thinking about what to make next.
And sometimes we do this because stillness feels uncomfortable. Stillness brings us closer to emotion, closer to parts of ourselves we may not yet fully understand. you might not love the piece that you've made. you might see flaws in it.
you might, have experienced some frustration during the creative process. but sitting with it after you've made it, is a really powerful part of honoring the process no matter what the outcome was. We keep moving. we rush past, witnessing our work. We miss something essential.
We miss the messages. We miss the integration. We miss the quiet wisdom that only reveals itself with time and presence. So witnessing your art really is not about critiquing it, okay? it's not about deciding whether something is good or bad. It's about presence.
It's about sitting quietly with what you've created and noticing [00:03:00] what arises good and bad in your body, in your emotions, in your awareness. It's about letting the artwork exist without immediately needing to define it. Sometimes witnessing, just looks like sitting with a cup of tea and simply looking at your piece, uh, for as long as feels good to you, a few minutes, a few hours, whatever works for you.
Sometimes it's noticing a feeling that surfaces when you return to it the next day or the next week or the next month, or, you know, even longer, period. Sometimes it's realizing that something you painted, uh, that you drew or wrote, carried a meaning you weren't consciously aware of at the time, and this is where it becomes really powerful.
One of the most beautiful things about soulful creativity is that symbols often emerge before we understand them. We create from intuition, from emotion, from something deeper than logic. And later [00:04:00] meanings, begin to arise. They begin to reveal themselves. You might notice a recurring shape or color that reflects something happening in your life.
You might realize that a symbol you drew carries a deeper truth or desire. You might see a theme that keeps appearing across multiple pieces. And these insights rarely arrive in the moment of creation. They kind of appear as sort of like a penny drop moment, you know, after you've kind of, you know, created multiple pieces maybe.
with this same kind of insight embedded, the insights arrive in the quiet moments afterwards when you allow yourself to witness. And sometimes the messages. Don't come for days or weeks or even longer. But when you stay open, they come.
I truly believe that witnessing your art is a practice of presence, almost like, a, a med meditation, right? We are not actually doing anything. We're just sitting there looking, [00:05:00] breathing, and creating space for our art. It teaches us to slow down, to listen, to soften gently shifts. It gently shifts creativity from being something we perform into, something we experience.
And presence is where inner connection lives. So often we think creativity is about expression. You know about what we've made, but it's also about relationship. A relationship with yourself, a relationship with your inner world, a relationship with your truth. And witnessing your art deepens that relationship in a very quiet and powerful way.
When you sit with your art long enough, you begin to realize something profound. You're not just witnessing the artwork, you are witnessing yourself, your feelings, your patterns, your desires, your healing, your truth. Art becomes a mirror, not in a harsh or critical way, but in a compassionate, [00:06:00] revealing way.
And this is where creativity becomes more than something that we do. it does become a practice of self connection, a practice of listening inward, a practice of meeting yourself with curiosity instead of judgment. Witnessing is where the wisdom lives. It's where we're truly able to gather the gold from our creative process, because the creative process allows something to emerge.
But witnessing allows it to integrate. And integration is where transformation actually happens. not in the doing, but in the understanding, in the noticing, in the quiet realizations that slowly change how we see ourselves and our lives. So I want to leave you with a gentle invitation today.
Choose one piece of art you've created recently. It doesn't need to be your favorite. It doesn't need to be finished perfectly. It just needs to be something that came from you. Sit with it for five [00:07:00] minutes, not to analyze it, not to improve it, not to judge it, just to be with it. Notice what you feel.
Notice what you see. Notice what surprises you, and then if you feel called, you might like to ask yourself this question. If this artwork could speak, what might it gently be asking me to notice right now? I hope you enjoyed this episode. Take care.