AG2022_2060618a

AG2022_2060618a

Happiness seems to require having a well-ordered life avoiding difficulty or discord, while joy can and does show up anywhere, often unexpectedly.

[…]

Joy is a desubjectifying process, an unfixing, an intensification of life itself. It is a process of coming alive and coming apart.

[…]

Plants are anything but passive.

[…]

They made the world.

R.S.

Black woman joy is like this:

Mama said one day long before I was born

she was walking down the street,

foxes around her neck, their little heads

smiling up at her and out at the world

[…]

This day was for foxes and hip rhythm

and musical perfection and folks on the street joining in the celebration

of breath and holiness. And they did too. In color-coordinated ensembles,

they kicked and turned and grinned and shouted like church

or football game, whatever their religious preference. The air

vibrated with music, arms, legs, and years of unrequited

sunshine.

The Language of Joy by Jacqueline Allen Trimble