snow melt
why did I think that
it’d be forever?
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: all I want
on home turf-
feeding watermelon seeds
to the hens
.
“On Home Turf,” Haiga, in “A Baker’s Dozen,” issue 4, 15 December 2012
…..
.
.
.
a fig is not a fig without your mouth
.
a pyromaniac’s dream on top of the world
.
In “Bones: Journal for Contemporary Haiku,” No 1, 15 December 2012
…..
at the bottom of the sea the bottom of the sea
.
raining stars
how the begging tin
sounds
.
in “Presence” #47, December 2012
…..
past her nails
a truth worth
holding on to
.
in Notes From The Gean, #14, p. 28, December 2012
…..
shooting star –
a baby slithers out
of the womb
.
frost bite
the winter bares its teeth
.
In “A Blackbird Sings: a small stone anthology”
edited by Fiona Robyn & Kaspalita Thompson, 2012
.
wordless poem sharing the silence of fallen leaves
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: seeking solace
.
outside the box more of the same crunchy snow
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: outside the box
without my glasses
the lit candelabra –
blazing star
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: candle
wall calendar –
each year Mount Olympus
a little farther
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: Mountain
a snow blanket
covers the sun collectors –
my old bike
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: twin wishes
sizzling roast –
I become
a shark
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: shark
1
resting the needles –
a half-finished poem
hangs from my lips
2
resting the needles –
I search the mirror
for clues
.
Playing with Gabi Greve‘s kigo for the day: ‘resting the needles’! See the entry in the World Kigo Database
NaHaiWriMo prompt: mirror
alone —
the kitten’s paw prints
in the snow
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: a haiku beginning with a word starting with letter L – well, it is either L1: ‘lonely,’ or ‘l’ is the second letter of the first word! I think ‘alone’ works better…
advent wreath
the first candle already down
to a stump
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: ornament(s)
Isn’t time passing quickly? Even the candle in my advent wreath burned down already. For those not familiar with this kind of wreath: it is a wreath that sits on the centre of the table (in this case my table) with four, in some cases five, candles; one for each of the weeks of advent. Each week one more candle is lit, until we reach Christmas! At this rate of burning however, there won’t be much to light on that last Sunday!
.
crawling out of its larval skin first love
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: dragonfly love
.
sign language
his hand
on his heart
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: sign
ice streams
the glacier’s last
stand
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: endings
.
Inspired also by the beautiful photographs in The Guardian here
flood tide
her canvas shoe sinks
into the snow
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: tide
.
full moon beyond the horizon her frozen stare
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: full moon
the Little Mermaid’s
return to the sea –
flowering cactus
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: allusion to poem, song, book
.
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: silence
freezing wind
the usual tooth starts
to ache
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: wind
pomegranate
she starts losing
her baby teeth
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: evolution (sort of)
cracks in the snow –
sprouting from her book
the old house
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: family
breaking bread –
she gives me her sweetest
smile
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: sharing
remembering
mean acts –
eyes of an owl
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: owl
icy wind –
huddling round the roasted
chestnuts stall
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: warmth
.
quill scratching a poem where it hurts
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: feather
A new downloadable book was made available on the 16th of November 2012 by Michael Dylan Welch, writer and poet, and founder of the NaHaiWriMo site and FB community. Titled “With Cherries on Top: 31 Flavors of NaHaiWriMo,” it is a sparkler of haiku, senryu, and micropoetry. It is excellently designed and presented, with fantastic photography, and also well-proof-read by Christina Nguyen. A haiku fireworks to enjoy on many a winter evening.

This is how Michael Dylan Welch introduces it:
“In August of 2012, the NaHaiWriMo page on Facebook featured daily writing prompts from 31 different prompters. Each prompter selected at least five of his or her favourite poems written in response. Michael Dylan Welch selected from these poems to produce the online PDF book, With Cherries on Top: 31 Flavors from NaHaiWriMo”
This book is available for free download, from www.nahaiwrimo.com
I am honored to have a few haiku of my own included, and to have been one of the 31 prompters of the month!
last leaf —
she closes
her eyes
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: last leaf
.
lightning she swallows the pit in her stomach
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: children
Syntagma Square
a marble head rolls
off its plinth
.
NaHaiWriMo prompt: landmark
.
For Syntagma Square see here
.
This poem alludes to G. Seferis’ lines (see below) about the ‘Greek problem’ of ‘having’ to live up to their
ancient ancestors…and not knowing how to, of course.
I woke with this marble head in my hands;
It exhausts my elbows and I don’t know where to put it down.
It was falling into the dream as I was coming out of the dream.
So our life became one and it will be very difficult for it to separate again
.
From Mythistorema, copied from wiki
The link here
While my first book of poetry, “In the Garden of Absence” is at the printers, being fitted into its paper dress, smoothed, sewn, and shaped physically into a book I can hold in my hands, I’d like to say
a huge thank you to Michael Dylan Welch for his generous Afterword “Presence in Absence.”
Also a huge thank you to my daughter Maria Pierides for her permission to use one of her paintings, “Welsh Hill,” for the book cover, Maria Pierides and Rubin Eynon for designing the cover, and Thomas Geyer for his help with formatting the print edition.
Special thanks to the members of the nurturing NaHaiWriMo Facebook community (now over 1000 people!) for their continuing inspiration, warm support, and encouragement.