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Behind the potter’s wheel, veterans work on healing

From their places behind the potter’s wheel, the former U.S. service members who attend the free classes at Odyssey ClayWorks can feel the good the studio is doing.

“When you start doing pottery, you just lose yourself in it,” Roseanna Coates says while working on a series of ceramic tiles during one class in the Asheville, North Carolina, studio. “It’s a better form of therapy than any therapy I’ve ever had.”

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Returning to civilian life after military deployment can be disorienting. For these veterans and their families, working with clay offers comfort, focus, and community.

Ms. Coates, who was in the Army for three years in the 1980s, says she suffered an incident of sexual trauma before a service-related injury ended her military career. She was attending counseling and therapy sessions at the Charles George Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Asheville when she learned about the Veterans Clay Program. 

Gabriel Kline, the studio’s owner, notes that he is not a trained art therapist and that the classes, though therapeutic, are not art therapy in the formal sense. But throwing clay on the potter’s wheel takes so much concentration, he says, that “it’s very difficult to be thinking about anything else.”

When Gabriel Kline founded Odyssey ClayWorks in 2013, he intended it to become more than a thriving business with an educational pottery studio, a sales gallery, and a residency program for ceramics artists. He says he also wanted to “do good” in his Asheville, North Carolina, community.

The former U.S. service members who participate in Odyssey’s Veterans Clay Program feel the good the studio is doing – from their places behind the potter’s wheel. For 11 years now, military veterans and their families have been coming for a series of pottery classes that Mr. Kline offers free of charge. The classes help veterans heal or simply forge stronger ties in the city.

“When you start doing pottery, you just lose yourself in it,” Roseanna Coates says while working on a series of ceramic tiles during one class. “It’s a better form of therapy than any therapy I’ve ever had.”

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Returning to civilian life after military deployment can be disorienting. For these veterans and their families, working with clay offers comfort, focus, and community.

Ms. Coates, who was in the Army for three years in the 1980s, says she suffered an incident of sexual trauma before a service-related injury ended her military career. She was attending counseling and therapy sessions at the Charles George Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Asheville when she learned about the Veterans Clay Program. “It just felt like home,” she says. “It’s calm and nonjudgmental.”

Starr Sariego/Special to The Christian Science Monitor

Mr. Kline finishes throwing a large serving bowl on a pottery wheel.

An appreciation for service

Mr. Kline notes that he is not a trained art therapist and that the classes, though therapeutic, are not art therapy in the formal sense. But clay, to him, is “a material that calls you into the present moment.” And throwing clay on the potter’s wheel takes so much concentration, he says, that “it’s very difficult to be thinking about anything else.”

Though Mr. Kline himself never enlisted, his father and grandfather both served in the Army, and he grew up with a respect for the military and for the idea of service. He also knew of many contemporaries from his hometown who were returning from overseas tours of duty with physical and emotional problems. Starting a program for veterans was a way to pay homage to his family’s service, to honor a good friend who was killed in the Iraq War, and to establish his business as a beneficent force in the community.

“I thought pottery could provide a returning soldier the peace, serenity, and calm I experienced,” Mr. Kline says. “I thought maybe it would be a good experience for people who have gone through something traumatic.” 

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