.
lullaby
louder than drizzle —
tea leaf song
.
Posted on Stella’s Stones and Facebook.
Participating in NaHaiWriMo February 2011
.
lullaby
louder than drizzle —
tea leaf song
.
Posted on Stella’s Stones and Facebook.
Participating in NaHaiWriMo February 2011
.
geranium
red petals …
for nails
.
Posted on Stella’s Stones and Facebook.
Participating in NaHaiWriMo February 2011
.
exchange —
my laptop
for a butterfly
.
Posted on Stella’s Stones and Facebook.
Participating in NaHaiWriMo February 2011
.
have you thought
of your effect on us?
full moon
.
I wrote this haiku trying to understand aspects of (by skirting close to) Issa’s poem, posted as an epigraph on the Red Dragonfly blog http://haikuproject.wordpress.com/
Posted on Stella’s Stones and Facebook.
Participating in NaHaiWriMo February 2011
.
spring tides —
a full moon halo
for my walk
.
Posted on Stella’s Stones and Facebook.
Participating in NaHaiWriMo February 2011
.
in the garden
a bush warbler serenades
plum tree blooms
.
Posted on Stella’s Stones and Facebook.
Participating in NaHaiWriMo February 2011
.
too old now
to dance the sugar plum
fairy
.
Posted on Stella’s Stones and Facebook
Participating in NaHaiWriMo February 2011
.
in my basket
a mud crab’s
oyster shell home
.
Posted on Stella’s Stones and Facebook
Participating in NaHaiWriMo February 2011
.
spring evening
collecting nectar from
your lips
.
Posted on Stella’s Stones and Facebook
Participating in NaHaiWriMo February 2011
.
hearing swallows sing
a blind woman
smiles
.
Posted on Stella’s Stones and Facebook
Participating in NaHaiWriMo February 2011
.
good luck–
in my tea cup cloud hugging
full moon
.
Posted on Stella’s Stones and Facebook
Participating in NaHaiWriMo February 2011
.
raining frogs
Basho
in the clouds
.
Posted on Stella’s Stones and Facebook
Participating in NaHaiWriMo February 2011
.
old story
on my desk twelve pens
in search of haiku
.
Posted on Stella’s Stones and Facebook
Participating in NaHaiWriMo February 2011
.
inkstone
the ebb and flow
of my Muse
.
Posted on Stella’s Stones and Facebook
Participating in NaHaiWriMo February 2011
.
worlds’ edge
shoals of flying fish
by the lakeshore
.
Posted on Stella’s Stones and Facebook.
Participating in NaHaiWriMo February 2011
.
empty dollhouse
the cello in the corner
moans
.
Posted on Stella’s Stones and Facebook
Participating in NaHaiWriMo February 2011
.
mirage
sun streaming through the curtain
lights up the oil lamp
.
Posted on Stella’s Stones and Facebook.
Participating in NaHaiWriMo February 2011
.
citrus grove
playing with the sun
scents the Aegean
.
Posted on Stella’s Stones and Facebook.
Participating in NaHaiWriMo February 2011
.
fresh baklava
I wish it were
a photograph
.
Posted on Stella’s Stones and Facebook.
Participating in NaHaiWriMo February 2011
.
found purse
birthday girl with doll
beaming
.
Posted on Stella’s Stones and Facebook.
Participating in NaHaiWriMo February 2011
.
meditation
in my cupped hands
a hummingbird
.
Posted on Stella’s Stones and Facebook.
Participating in NaHaiWriMo February 2011
.
daybreak
the taste of tangy sweet apple
on my tongue
.
Posted on Stella’s Stones and Facebook.
Participating in NaHaiWriMo February 2011
.
spring bulbs
the touch of mother’s hand
on my shoulder
.
Published on Stella’s Stones and Facebook
The River of Stones project, organized by Fiona Robyn and Kaspalita, has now come to an end. In January, for a whole month, people from all over the world wrote a ‘stone,’ a polished thought/moment of experience. I wrote and posted mine in this blog, on my twitter stream and on my separate tumblr blog Stella’s Stones. Now that January (2011) is over, you can find more of my very short work in Stella’s Stones: on the right hand side of the front page, just below my twitter feed. A big thank you to Fiona and Kaspalita!
February (2011) is also a special month. Michael Dylan Welch of Graceguts organizes the NaHaiWriMo challenging haiku poets and others to write a haiku a day for the month of February. Can you do it? Can I do it? I will certainly try. You can follow my haiku progress in Stella’s Stones.
For well-writen essays on Haiku and other genres click Graceguts
poem–
the old soup bowl
filled with cream
.