For the Joy & the Sorrow: A 12-Week Intensive for Writing the World Starts January 8!
Also, I spoke to Write-Minded about attention, playfulness & surprise + tonight's free reading for the launch of Invisible Strings: 113 Poets Respond to the Songs of Taylor Swift!
I’ve got some fun things to share with you today!
First, a new Write-Minded podcast interview with Brooke Warner & Grant Faulkner, where we talk how attention, playfulness & surprise can animate and revitalize your writing, with real-life examples from real-life writers. Also, what I’ve learned about literary community after a lifetime of being a “non-joiner.”
You can listen to the whole episode here:
Launch Reading for Invisible Strings Anthology Tonight!
Second, it’s launch day for Invisible Strings: 113 Poets Respond to the Songs of Taylor Swift!
The event starts at 7 Eastern, and I’ll be reading my poem, “Firstborn.” You will also hear work read by many of the best living poets of our time, many whose work we’ve close read here at WITD, like …
Melissa Studdard, Jane Hirshfield, Kim Addonizio, Ellen Bass, Dorianne Laux, Diane Seuss Major Jackson, Rae Armantrout, Matt Abbott, Lisa Fay Coutley, John Gallaher, Jill Bialosky, J.D. lsip, Kerry Neville, Dean Rader, Dustin Brookshire, January Gill O'Neil, Subhaga Crystal Bacon, Stephanie Burt, Tennison Black, Robin Behn, Gustavo Hernandez, Samiya Bashir, Victoria Redel, Betsy Sholl, Christian Gullette, Mary Jo Bang, Susan Rich, Laura Kasischke, Leah Umansky, Katie Manning, Deborah Landau, Diane Ackerman, David Groff, Lauren Mukamal Camp, Carey Salerno, Joan Kwon, Glass Maggie Smith, Cornelius Eady, Ashley Mag Gabbert, Molly Peacock, Blas Falconer, Didi Jackson, Tomas Q. Morin, Anna Journey, Andrea Gilham Simpson, Barbara Hamby, Amy King, Bianca Stone, Shikha Saklani ,Malaviya Ruben, Quesada and Ellie Black, and more!
The event is free and virtual—but you do need to register for the Zoom link, which you can do here. I hope to see some of your faces! I have never read with a line-up quite like tonight’s (and it’s nerve-wracking).
For the Joy & the Sorrow: A 12-Week Intensive for Writing the World Starts January 8!
And third, I’m ready to announce Writing in the Dark’s first seasonal intensive of 2025—”For the Joy & the Sorrow: A 12-Week Intensive for Writing the World."
This multi-genre, all-level intensive, inspired by Ross Gay’s The Book of Delights, is uniquely designed to draw our close attention—and our most alive writing—toward the extraordinary in the ordinary by seeing and illuminating the innate duality in all things.
Using the power of close, clear-eyed attention, we’ll learn how to first see, then truly perceive, and finally, vividly capture the beautiful and the broken with the eyes of a photographer and the heart of a poet.
About the Gay’s The Book of Delights, NPR’s Christina Cala says:
The book is filled with such joy and effusiveness that I find myself revisiting it over and over again. Over the years, it has offered me a template for how to hold the good with the bad, to be more present, and to revel in the little things. This summer, I reread it yet again and found myself meditating on a desire Gay had voiced: wanting to be softer in a world so ready to sharpen us and to make us hard.
Writing in the Dark’s seasonal intensives are generative, playful, challenging, inspiring, and supportive, with a balanced emphasis on the freedom to create and the rigor to advance your craft.
Here feedback I received just yesterday from the WITD community:
With your passionate instruction and well-constructed exercises, my writing has improved immeasurably.
If I had not found you Jeannine, I would be still blind in my writing, thinking I knew how to write. I have written several blogs and newsletters that failed, and I know why now. I didn't know how to write for an audience/reader. I am learning so much here about writing in this community and its ignited my passion, curiosity and eagerness to write. And I'm having fun doing it!
The word "generous" has been applied to you, Jeannine, and your method/offering of teaching through Substack (and SCHOOL). It applies. Because of your allowance to “bring what we can" and that we are "enough" have, yes, given me full permission to be here. To embrace this love affair at an entirely new level. It is deeply gratifying. Thank you, ad infinitum.
I found WITD by chance, but feel so at home here. Your kindness and generosity are a big part of that. I do believe I am learning a lot at an accelerated pace.
Your exercises have brought back to me a love of writing that left me when I tried to get an MFA many years ago. Those workshops were complete agony for me. But now every day I pick an exercise and start to think, maybe I can write something? Just a little something, it doesn’t have to be good. I took up painting and drawing because there is always something to learn and expand to but it was okay with me if it was bad. I really had forgotten how to do that with writing, it’s always had this other place in my mind. This is a real life changer here
So much of it comes down to the teacher. Jeannine, your teaching feels kindred to me, partly because of the craft elements, but also because of your themes, and how you model how to own our sides of our stories, and—this is crucial—handle the cost. I feel strong and skilled enough to start navigating this now.
What Will We Do During The Joy & The Sorrow?
We’ll close read essays from The Book of Delights (you will need to obtain a copy!). Then we’ll emulate—based on inventive, structured exercises—Ross Gay’s practice of attention and his devotion to recording and shaping the world’s generous material into something more than itself.
Attending to joy or witnessing joy or falling into joy or entering joy or however we think about it, practicing joy, practicing our entanglements actually means practicing, you know, what you might call meaning, which I think is a worthwhile question. You know, like, what's meaning in life?
~Ross Gay
Who is Jeannine?
You can read more about me here, but basically I’m a writer and teacher who loves to teach. I recently received a spreadsheet of absolutely lovely reflections from participants in the Dirty, Messy, Alive Embodied Memoir Summit (thanks, Janelle Hardy for conducting the survey). Here are just a few:
“…[J]oy is the mostly invisible, the underground union between us, you and me, which is, among other things, the great fact of our life and the lives of everyone and thing we love going away. If we sink a spoon into that fact, into the duff between us, we will find it teeming. It will look like all the books ever written. It will look like all the nerves in a body. We might call it sorrow, but we might call it a union, one that, once we notice it, once we bring it into the light, might become flower and food. Might be joy.”
~ Ross Gay
WITD intensives are for discovering, exploring, and practicing—for working hard and having fun. But they can also be for advancing your work in progress or for starting new work for later publication, just as with other recent intensives like The Art of the Scene, Strange Containers and The Letter Reimagined. Many wonderful published pieces emerge from Writing in the Dark, some which you can peruse on our big, beautiful list of published work born in WITD:
Born in WITD: A Big Beautiful & Growing Directory of Work Published by WITD Writers
Participants can also expect helpful craft essays and resources you always find at WITD and detailed writing exercises with lots of opportunities to share and read each other’s work, which is a beautiful facet of this community.
The Joy & The Sorrow is for all levels, and equally applicable to all genres, because attention is the bedrock of writing.
You’ll experience inventive new ways to break out of the same old/same old in order to find new ways onto the page. This intensive will be both accessible and challenging, as well as inspiring and supportive.
To note, THE JOY & THE SORROW is not a writing class per se (no class meetings, no Zoom, no “assignments,” etc.). It’s a WITD intensive on Substack, for which we are now what Billie Oh would call “medium famous.” An intensive is where all the material is delivered through four consecutive Wednesday posts, straight to your email inbox. I draw this distinction because I do ALSO teach writing classes! Which are different, which are tuition-based, and which are adjacent to and supported by but separate from the WITD newsletter on Substack.
For The Joy & the Sorrow and all WITD intensives, everything happens right here on the posts, and as long as you are a paid or founding member of WITD, you’re all set!
By the way, WITD subscriptions make wonderful gifts for the writer in your life (or you can donate subscriptions to our scholarship fund, which we appreciate so much. It allows us to comp subscriptions without any questions, and provide a sliding-scale on all of our synchronous classes.) Gifted and donated subscriptions keep our community accessible and are deeply appreciated.
What’s Included in The Joy & The Sorrow
Paid members:
Full access to all The Joy & The Sorrow posts, sent via email on Wednesdays, for close readings, writing exercises, direct instruction and inspiration for trying your hand at some unusual new short work.
Access to our incredible comments—WITD comments sections are what makes this place so damn beautiful, because of the amazingness of the Writing in the Dark community. Each week, participants share questions, insights, and snippets of work in progress—and your guides, Jeannine and Billie, actively participate, as well.
Founding members also receive cool interactive stuff, like:
Occasional Voice Memos and Video Notes (like this recent Voice Memo on why you’re never too late and always enough).
Occasional Live Write-Ins and Live Salons on Zoom w/open mic readings (these are so fun)
If you love face-to-face stuff, voice stuff, and more interactivity, the founding membership is for you for $15 more annually.
All participants come away with:
A storehouse of valuable new ways to think about writing, and why we gain from stretching that way, plus specific tools to apply long after the the intensive is over.
A collection of new work in progress that you can continue to develop on your own.
An archive of readings and writing exercises you can repeat as desired.
A deeper understanding of the ways fluency in scene writing or can enliven and strengthen all other aspects of your writing practice.
Join now to start poking around our giant archive and maybe even dip your toe into our thriving Thursday Threads, or explore the full archive of past WITD intensives and more than 500 posts rich with inspiring and instructive content.
What People Say About Writing in the Dark Intensives
I can’t believe what I’m getting out of this intensive. It’s changing my writing in the most unexpected ways, and I am beyond grateful. You are the most generous teacher.
You are magic. Pure magic.
I have learned much from you in the last year, through your weekly posts and seasonal intensives. The depth and quality of your content is unmatched on Substack (IMHO). That, plus the network of subscribers you have garnered is why I look forward to Wednesdays! (And Mondays for Lit Salon and Thursdays for the new Threads!) I have been involved in workshops that cost more but provide less. Thanks for all you are producing and the community you have created in an effort to bring the out our best writing selves.
As always, there's more to these exercises than I first anticipate.
I’m thoroughly enjoying this challenge and truly appreciate all the ways you’re helping each of us become more thoughtful and evocative writers.
It's actually been super helpful to work through the exercises in quick succession, like a little writing course... But so much more inspiring and thoughtful and generous and fun than any I've taken before. THANK YOU Jeannine, you are brilliant.
These assignments are like magic.
Your post gave me a giant AHA moment. You’ve unlocked my understanding of tension and storytelling in memoir.
This post was wonderful. Love the first quote especially. I had a couple of deeper realizations with this exercise.
Reading all the comments on my writing today, so full of enthusiasm and encouragement, really made my day! One of the things I will treasure most about this challenge is learning to trust myself and others with my writing.
Join us for The Joy & The Sorrow!
What to Expect From Every WITD Intensive
Unusual craft essays on scene writing, and the space between that explore inventive approaches to short work, along with structured writing exercises to get you started on some of your own!
Inventive writing exercises that invite you to try some really unexpected new approaches on the page.
Encouragement to participate each week—which is a very lively experience—or work at your own pace, or start the challenge later or repeat it, or whatever works best for you, because all of the posts will be tagged and permanently archived in order.
At the end, you’ll have a cadre of original, interesting, and intriguing new pieces you can revise and consider. If we’re lucky, these new works will really surprise us.
An immersion in the concept of “zero-waste” writing, where everything interesting can become something more than itself now or later.
Encouragement to record your experiences as part of the process—and you can expect to find me and Billie Oh in the comments, too, participating in the conversation.
Links to resources for further reading.
Exercises that are clear, doable, and scaffolded over the 6 weeks in a way that allows you, if you like, to “arranges the bits” toward an interesting suggestion of wholeness later.
Highly usable craft tools you can apply forever.
Specific, potent literary approaches to deepen and illuminate your relationship with language.
New discoveries about yourself and your life.
Exercises that are specific and directive and clear, but also a bit feral and unpredictable. You can expect (as always in WITD) exercises that honor the truth of living in bodies that breathe and move and laugh and cry, while also living in a world that breathes and moves and laughs and cries, while also having unruly minds that are constantly escaping to the past and the future even when what we most need is to attend to this exact moment in order to live lives that are, as Mary Oliver said, “particular and real.”
To be imperfect and write imperfectly, and for that to be perfectly okay.
To come out of this intensive with new ideas about what writing can be, and how it can feel.
To come out of this intensive with new ideas of who you are, who you are becoming, and what is possible for you as a writer.
I know from the experience of The Art of the Scene, The Letter Reimagined, Strange Containers, the Lyric Essay Challenge and Story Challenge and The Visceral Self that these things evolve and change along the way, but these are the main points as far as we can see, and I’m happy to answer questions if you have them! Just throw your thoughts into the comments.
I can’t wait to write with you!
Just today I made plans with my brother and sister in law to start a group “delights practice” after listening to Ross Gay on We Can Do Hard Things. I’m so there for this. And not at all surprised this is your next intensive; it’s so perfectly you/WITD.
I am so excited with the focus of the next intensive. I just happened to purchase a copy of Ross Gay's book after hearing his interview recently on the "We Can Do Hard Things" podcast with Glennon Doyle (his second appearance) and now I am so excited to delve into his much-needed perspective through your always-exciting, ever-playful intensives. I find myself living these days in the in-between of joy and sorrow, beginnings and endings, belief in the possibility of love and our common humanity, and the heaviness of fear and despair. Much to explore in our writing together. I also very much enjoyed the Taylor Swift inspired reading tonight and thought your poem was so very lovely, Jeannine.