Eventually several hands grasped a hold of me
I was captured and carried back toward the ritual space as laughter erupted from everyone involved. The play that followed met every part of my request. I was held down, restrained, overwhelmed, and brought into waves of pleasure intense enough to leave me crying and laughing at the same time. Running commentary from those nearby transformed moments of ferocity into comedy. Jokes were made about “using up the Care Bear” and getting every last ounce of juice from me. The absurdity amplified rather than diminished the intimacy.
I had wanted to be emptied, and, I was.
Exhaustion settled into my muscles like relief.
The evening continued to unfold through dancing, cuddling, playful workshops, and shared delight. Music filled the room. Bodies moved. Conversations drifted between silliness and vulnerability. The sacred and ridiculous remained inseparable.
Reflecting on the retreat, I keep returning to the ways embodied experience teaches differently than theory ever can. I left understanding more deeply that consent is not simply a mechanism for preventing harm. It is a practice of becoming intimate with desire. It asks us to discern what we truly want, communicate honestly, remain accountable for our choices, and honour the humanity of those we encounter.
I learned that care deepens eroticism rather than diminishing it. I learned that responsibility creates the conditions for freedom. I learned that witnessing another person without trying to change them can be one of the greatest gifts we offer. I learned that playfulness belongs beside reverence and that laughter often accompanies the most transformative experiences.
Most importantly, I left trusting myself more fully and deeply feeling that permission to play is a gift.
I trust my capacity to navigate complexity. I trust my ability to move between caregiving and wildness, leadership and surrender, tenderness and intensity. I trust my body to tell the truth when I slow down enough to listen.
The Wheel of Consent is often described as a framework for understanding touch. My experience reminded me that it is also a framework for understanding relationship: relationship to desire, relationship to power, relationship to responsibility, and relationship to aliveness itself.
I arrived eager to contribute my labour and support the community around me. I left remembering that embodiment is about presence. It is about consenting, again and again, to the fullness of who we already are: devotional and mischievous, grounded and untamed, capable of care while remaining gloriously, unapologetically alive.