What Makes You Scream Yes?
"Pleasure is the point," writes adrienne maree brown. "Feeling good is not frivolous, it's freedom.
“I believe our imaginations—particularly the parts of our imaginations that hold what we most desire, what brings us pleasure, what makes us scream yes—are where we must seed the future, turn toward justice and liberation, and reprogram ourselves to desire sexually and erotically empowered lives.”
― adrienne maree brown, Pleasure Activism: The Politics of Feeling Good
What makes you scream yes? Or at least, whisper yes, or sigh yes, or think yes?
Do you know? Are you fully awake to the possibility of pleasure all around you?
It starts with opening ourselves to noticing.
Black feminist activist adrienne maree brown, author of Pleasure Activism: The Politics of Feeling Good, says we must …
“…notice what makes you feel good and what you are curious about; learn ways you can increase the amount of feeling-good time in your life, to have abundant pleasure; decrease any internal or projected shame or scarcity thinking around the pursuit of pleasure, quieting any voices of trauma that keep you from your full sacred sensual life; create more room for joy, wholeness, and aliveness (and less room for oppression, repression, self-denial and unnecessary suffering) in your life; identify strategies beyond denial or repression for navigating pleasure in relationship to others; and begin to understand the liberation possible when we collectively orient around pleasure and longing. Bonus: realize you are a pleasure activist!”
And Gabes Torres in Yes! Magazine, “Eros And The Revolution: Why Activism Needs Pleasure, writes:
Living in a culture of “more” conditions us to consume beyond “enough.” As a result, many of us automatically equate pleasure with excess, leaving those of us who are capitalism-critical apologetic and even punitive about feeling good, even though it is a very natural human experience.
“Pleasure is not one of the spoils of capitalism,” adrienne maree brown writes in Pleasure Activism. “It is what our bodies, our human systems, are structured for; it is the aliveness and awakening, the gratitude and humility, the joy and celebration of being miraculous.” We can redefine our relationship to pleasure by separating it from overindulgence—the consumption and escapism that take us away from being present with ourselves, our relationships, and our realities. The erotic invites us to be more present in the moments and areas we feel most alive in and energized for—even when grief and suffering are present.
Even when grief and suffering are present … that’s the clincher, I think, especially at times like now, when grief and suffering are so relentless all around us.
We can allow the weight of despair and guilt to block our full awareness of this world, this moment, this singular point in time in which you are living in a body resting on a rock warmed by the sun, the smell of morning still fresh in the grass around you.
We can allow the weight of despair and guilt to prevent us from living the kinds of lives in which the “erotic invites us to be more present in the moments we feel most alive in and energized for.”
Feeling that invitation, and heeding it, requires that we open ourselves and pay attention. And this openness and attention require, for many or most of us, an intentional practice. This is the cornerstone of embodied writing.
I know for sure that I am more and more open to this level of awareness and the invitation of the erotic in my own life as a result of my embodied writing practice. Sensory awareness is itself a portal to pleasure, because sensory awareness centers our life force in the body, while also connecting us to the exterior world, thus creating a current from body to world and back again.
A current of aliveness.
That current is always there, but when we live our lives primarily in our heads, as most of us do, we lose our sensitivity to this movement of life force between our bodies and the world, and in that way dull and deaden our experience of everyday pleasure.
One of the ways I know my embodied writing practice has increased my experience of the everyday erotic is the frequency with which my body responds to the words of others. When I am teaching, and a writer reads a sentence she wrote, or makes an observation about something we are reading or something someone else read, and the words are alive, a current of energy will travel through my body and raise goosebumps on my arms or even all up and down my arms and legs. It is a sensation of aliveness, absolute aliveness, aliveness in the language expressing itself in my body. And it is absolutely an example of the everyday erotic, and how we can experience more pleasure in our (one wild and precious) life when we awaken to the constancy of sensation available to us in this world we share.
This is the premise of our upcoming Writing in the Dark intensive: Writing Toward Pleasure.
Starting April 16, we’ll intentionally write toward pleasure beginning with paying more attention (which is harder than you think—we’re evolutionarily wired against doing so, which I wrote about here). We will actively seek sensory beauty, wildness, and depth.
You’ll find fuller description below of how WITD intensives work, but in short, this intensive will be delivered in six Wednesday posts with readings, craft discussion, and inventive exercises. As always, we’ll have a vibrant exploration of our experience in the comments section, where we post snippets of our writing, talk about it, and share our lives as writers. We also cheer each other on and shepherd each other through these shared creative adventures.
Meanwhile, let’s define pleasure. Here’s what the Empower Your Mind Therapy Institute says about it:
The experience of pleasure is unique to each and every person. If you’re having a hard time finding activities that bring you pleasure, one way to figure it out is by paying attention to your sensory experiences (sight, sound, smell, taste, and touch). What brings you satisfaction and enjoyment? Sometimes it is the most common and simple experiences that bring us pleasure, like waking up to your partner in the morning, or sharing a meal with a friend.
Does this kind of attention to sensory experience sound familiar? It’s a foundation stone of how we learn to write (and live) better at Writing in the Dark.
The only reason I could write it like I did was because of Writing in the Dark—the lessons and the generous and beautiful support from you and Billie and in the comments and the small writing groups. I did not know much about the craft of writing before I started writing with WITD: containers, prompts that led me nowhere I'd ever been before, white space, earning a line, devastating, hot/cold, I didn't know how to do any of that. And then the support, love, holding, being seen--the container of this space—I didn't have any of that before either. I am not just a better writer for having spent time in this gorgeous and beautiful space, I am a better human. ~Jocelyn Lovelle, WITD member
I just realized that your teaching is like that: raw, disobedient, feral and also meditative and open. This is such a great space from which to teach. Made me fall in love with what's happening here. ~Laure Jouteau, WITD member
What Does It Mean To Write Toward Pleasure?
Just like the Empower Your Mind Therapy Institute noted, it starts with sensation. All pleasure is grounded somewhere in our sensory body—that is, experiences grounded in the five major senses (or our memories of experiences grounded in the five major senses, because these experiences are stored permanently in our cells).
Writing toward pleasure involves paying close attention to sensory pleasures—the warmth of sun on my arms, the feeling of a baby sleeping on my chest, the stickiness of bread dough in my hands as I knead and pull, sitting next to my husband listening to “Chasing Cars” and getting lost in the sound, laying my head on his chest when he sings, running up a hill, feeling the burn in my thighs and lungs, the utter exhilaration and exhaustion that proves to me that I am alive, laughing with my adult kids about stupid and inappropriate things, laughing until my cheeks and ribs hurt, the feeling of Frannie snuggled up against my thigh as I write on my laptop, the sound of ocean waves, the rocking of those waves, the swell and fall of them, and the way that pulls me into all the other swells and falls inside of myself, or, for example, Ada Limon’s “obscene display of cherry limbs shoving their cotton candy-colored blossoms to the slate sky of Spring rains.”1 To name only a few.
What about sex?
For most people, sexual experiences are a powerful form of sensory pleasure, but this is not an erotica intensive. And while I proposed and am now moderating an AWP panel (we’ll talk more about AWP soon!) called “Sex After Survivorship: Writing Real Sex from Traumatic to Titillating and Everything In Between,” with rockstar writers Natashia Deon, Gina Frangello, Amanda Montei, and Rebecca Woolf (I can’t wait!,), I’m not actually qualified or prepared to facilitate an erotica writing intensive on Substack (maybe someday, but not now).
So while sexuality is not censored here, I’d ask we be considerate that our writing not be graphic/explicit, and be mindful of restraint. As I have long taught (in the arena of trauma writing and the technique “writing hot cold”), what we do not say on the page can actually be more evocative than what we do say. So here, too, we’ll err toward less is more. If you’ve been at WITD for a while now in other intensives, you already know the vibe. If not, read other people’s comments and you’ll get the drift easily. And if in doubt, probably don’t.
Anyway, the range of sensory pleasure to be celebrated and reveled in is so wide and expansive, and has so much inextricable overlap with every system of our bodies, that there is rarely any full separation between one form of sensory pleasure and another. This, too, will be a rich and fascinating intersection to explore in language. Through attention, language, and articulation, we will awaken and energize our pleasure receptors and the writing that stems from those most alive places.
Ultimately, to write toward pleasure, we will need to engage in embodied writing, and engaging in embodied writing enlivens all the other writing (and living) we will do.
What is Embodied Writing?
We experience the world through our bodies. Each and every sensory impression forms our bank of experiences, experiences that help us know who we are in the world. And our cells hold these records of the past, awareness of the present, and imaginings of the future. These embodied sensations form the basis of writing that electrifies the primal exchange we continually experience with the world.
This is a visceral phenomenon. Visceral means “relating to the viscera,” or your internal organs. It also means “relating to deep inward feelings rather than to the intellect.” And research—especially that of James Pennebaker at University of Texas at Austin—shows that writing heals us, literally (meaning on a physical level).
If you are more curious about embodied writing, here are some posts I’ve shared in the past, around the time of our Visceral Self intensive, to give a sense of how I approach writing through the body, which begins with the senses:
What’s Included In Toward Pleasure
Paid members of the Writing in the Dark community receive:
Six Toward Pleasure posts starting April 16, with short readings (poems and excerpts), discussions, and sensory writing exercises
Access to our bustling comments section where, each week, participants share questions, insights, and snippets of work in progress, and where Jeannine and Billie also participate.
Founding members also receive:
Voice Memos/Video posts (we’re planning more of these in 2025!)
Live Salons on Zoom
All participants will gain:
More ways of toward writing pleasure
A keener awareness of the balance of pleasure and pain, positive and negative, in their work
Powerful embodied craft principles and specific tools to apply long after the the intensive is over
A collection of new work in progress (scenes, fragments, poems, flash) that you can continue to develop on your own
A deeper understanding of the ways in which embodied writing techniques and attention to pleasure enliven our prose, and tools for engaging the sensory body in your writing practice.
Some Things People Have Said About Writing in the Dark Intensives
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.
What to Expect From Toward Pleasure:
You can expect, if you work every exercise, to complete the intensive with up to 12 original, interesting, and intriguing scene/fragments that you can either work into a complete story or expand or revise into separate pieces or use as scenes in some other work in progress. And you can expect these scenes/fragments to differ greatly from anything you might have written otherwise.
You can expect structured prompts and meditations and a yin yoga pose via email every Wednesday, so that you have a full week to complete each exercise before the next one arrives.
You can expect every exercise to invite you to engage your body and to revel in language and expand your understanding of how embodied writing techniques supercharge our prose.
You can expect to be encouraged to participate each week—which is a very lively experience—or work at your own pace, or start the intensive later or repeat it, or whatever works best for you, because all of the posts will be tagged and permanently archived in order.
You can expect (to the point above) to be encouraged to embrace zero-waste writing, where everything interesting can become something more than itself now or later.
You can expect to be invited and encouraged to record your experiences as part of the process—and you can, if you share your thoughts in the chat or comments, expect to bump into me and Billie Oh there, participating in the conversation.
You can expect each exercise to be accompanied by a detailed craft writing and resources.
You can expect the exercises to be 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.
You can expect to amass not just a collection of scenes/fragments, but also an array of highly usable craft tools you can apply forever.
You can expect to be introduced to several specific, potent literary approaches to deepen and illuminate your relationship with language.
You can expect to make discoveries about yourself and your life.
You can expect to be introduced to some less familiar readings as well as some crowd favorites.
You can expect 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.”
You can expect to be imperfect, and for that to be perfectly okay.
You can expect to come out of this challenge with new ideas about what writing can be, and how it can feel.
You can expect with new ideas of who you are, who you are becoming, and what is possible for you as a writer.
These are the main points—but of course these things evolve and change along the way. But I’m happy to answer questions if you have them! Share thoughts into the comments or respond via email to this post. I can’t wait to start writing toward pleasure with all of you in April—hearing your voices, celebrating this thing we do, this miraculous, infinite, exasperating, enlivening, and ultimately freeing thing called language.
Love,
Jeannine
https://poets.org/poem/instructions-not-giving
And now you quote adrienne maree brown and Pleasure Activism and all I can say is yes! Yes! Yes!
Jeannine,
I started thinking about the paradox between grief and joy, and pleasure and pain, immediately after our daughter Sarah was born. It's because I am prone to sadness. I have a melancholic disposition, so grief was easy for me to identify after about two weeks of relentless diagnostic exams and appointments. But joy? Ha! That was something elusive, distant, and impossible.
One day I sat in an armchair in front of an east-facing window in our old house. The house was quiet. Ben must have been at work, and my two girls were napping. But the sun streaked through that window as I wept and wept--the way I did all the time back then, because I was living in a cave of despair. It was a fleeting moment, what I call a micro-moment, of silence and solitude.
And then I heard a robin outside my window, which disrupted my wallowing. For some reason, when I noticed her fluffing the feathers in her nest and adjusting herself to feed her tiny fledglings, I stopped sobbing. I observed this mama and realized she and I were more alike than I knew before: we both lived our lives centered around care and nurture. But the way she did it seemed so natural, and it delighted me. Only for a flash, though.
But that flash was enough for me. It sustained me. I realized that I could still hold grief, still carry it, while also experiencing momentary flutters of elation. And that sorrow and joy often hold hands. There's a relationship between the two, and seldom since then have I experienced one without the other.
So pleasure in the midst of pain...yes, I can do that. I have been working through and with that for many years--twelve, to be exact, because Sarah turned twelve on Sunday. I can sit with both my pleasure and my pain.
In fact, I believe embodiment means asking my body what stories it wants to tell through me. Then I listen. Then I pay attention to where I'm feeling the reaction, and I allow that story to emerge.
Looking forward to the next intensive on pleasure!