Why Making Things With Your Hands Is Actually Medicine

This year, as I watched the fun and frenetic energy of Summer wend into the golden hues and slowed pace of Fall, I felt this inexplicable desire to make stuff with my hands. I’ve always been on the creative side, and crafts seem to be the perfect fit: Making cool, pretty stuff with my hands.

So I started beading earrings, folding origami, and making junk journals. I started writing more on paper. I even schlepped out my old magazines and started collaging again.

This is how I came to remember the magic healing powers of #analoglife

Photo by Annie Spratt on Unsplash

Honestly it took me by surprise how quickly I started noticing changes. Whenever I sat down and started, time would just fly by, and I would feel so centred and relaxed. As Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi would say, I entered a state of flow.

I began to wonder, is there something to this? Is crafting some kind of medicine?

As it turns out, hobbies are great for all kinds of reasons, but crafting does something special.

There’s real science behind why it feels so good. When you’re working on something detailed and hands-on, you create these little pockets of predictability that help settle your nervous system and give you back a sense of control.

It’s psychologically reparative—your parasympathetic nervous system kicks in, which is your body’s natural relaxation response. When you’re crafting with others, that effect gets even stronger.

For those of us who were taught that sitting still means we’re wasting time, crafting offers a different way to find balance. It’s not about being productive; it’s about regulating yourself through focused, tactile work.

The repetitive motions, working with your hands, connecting with nature, or just making something can genuinely reduce anxiety and lift your mood. You’re giving yourself a break from screens, lowering your stress hormones, and boosting the feel-good chemicals in your brain. It’s a natural calm that builds over time.

So hopefully by now your hands are itching to try something! Here are some ideas to get you started:

Creative and Tactile Hobbies

Knitting or crocheting: The repetitive, rhythmic motions can be meditative and calming, leading to reduced stress and anxiety.

Gardening: Nurturing plants and connecting with nature is deeply relaxing and can improve emotional well-being.

Crafting (e.g., cross-stitch, pottery): These detailed activities create a “zone of predictability” that regulates the nervous system and gives a sense of agency.

Painting, drawing, or sculpting: These hobbies serve as an outlet for emotional expression, helping to process feelings and reduce stress.

Hobbies for the Brain and Mindfulness

Journaling or creative writing: Writing can help process emotions, organize thoughts, and improve mental clarity.

Playing a musical instrument: This can improve memory, hand coordination, and focus, while also creating new brain connections.

Puzzles or brain games: Activities like Sudoku or chess strengthen cognitive function, improve memory, and boost processing speed.

Learning a new language: This keeps the brain sharp and can be a rewarding way to engage with new material.

Why Any of This Matters

The benefits of hobbies are massive! They can lower stress hormones like cortisol and boost mood. They provide a sense of accomplishment—having tangible progress can be so fulfilling. They can be an emotional outlet or a social connection.

Now I can guess what you’re thinking: Where am I going to find the time to do this?

Well I could suggest skip a little scroll and pick up a little hobby. But honestly, it doesn’t have to be a massive time sink. Even 20 minutes here and there can bring about big changes in how you feel.

In our fast-paced world built on speed and expediency, doing something slow and intentional is its own kind of medicine. Creating things is an act of expression, a way to slow down and practice self-care.

So the next time stress has you wound tight, remember: your hands know how to help you unwind. Let them.

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