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dark moon
balanced finish of a wine
long forgotten
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NaHaiWriMo prompt: taste
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dark moon
balanced finish of a wine
long forgotten
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NaHaiWriMo prompt: taste
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shooting stars
all you need to know about
sciatica
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NaHaiWriMo prompt: pain
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eating alone –
I measure the distance
to the moon
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NaHaiWriMo prompt: food/eating
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song of the earth
a blackbird sings
the first notes
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NaHaiWriMo prompt: music/song
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moist earth
a simple gadfly knows what’s best
for its eggs
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Posted on FB site Joys of Japan
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moon flower
I wrap my dreams
in furoshiki
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What on earth is furoshiki? Please visit Gabi Greve’s Daruma Museum to find out! Wonderful patterns on the cotton cloth wrappers too. And don’t forget to scroll down the page to find my haiku.
(First shared on Fb group Joys of Japan wall)
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wintersweet –
shifting my weight
to the other foot
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NaHaiWriMo prompt: narrowing focus.
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before the rain –
the air fills with the scent
of rain
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before the rain the scent of rain
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NaHaiWriMo prompt: scent/smell
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salmon roe
he rubs his wife’s
pregnant belly
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handiwork –
snowball by snowball
we receive winter
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NaHaiWriMo prompt: hands
1
daydream
frost flower
garden
2
foot mirage –
trickling water from the hot
water bottle
3
daydream
how time
flies!
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NaHaiWriMo prompt: daydreaming
time and time again
clocks render me
speechless
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time piece
a kitten knows when it’s time
to eat
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NaHaiWriMo prompt: here and now (time)
1
long after you left
your warmth on the feather
cushion
2
after the rain –
a ball of fur on
the sunlit sill
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NaHaiWriMo prompt: fur/feather
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at my door
singing out of tune
three kings
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NaHaiWriMo prompt: January first week
1
all the way
across three generations
Forget-me-nots
2
silver clouds –
on the second day
we argue
3
singing the alphabet
on the way home
good-luck cat
4
nature programme
my kitten searches for birds
behind the telly
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NaHaiWriMo prompt: family / friends
It is January and time for noticing, for paying attention to, well, whatever attracts our attention on a daily basis and writing a small poem, sentence, something about it – what is called a small stone. It is not difficult, believe me. The world calls to us all the time; in the words of Mary Oliver,
“The world offers itself to your imagination,
calls to you like the wild geese, harsh and exciting-“
From Wild Geese, Mary Oliver’s poem in Wikipedia
Let‘s not be deaf to it this year. Let’s start small, noticing one thing at a time, writing a small stone.
If you’d like to join in, take a look at the founding fathers, ooops, founding couple: Fiona and Kaspa’s site here They explain everything… And you can even get a lovely badge from their site for your blog. I will be getting one soon myself…
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Oh yes, I almost forgot, here is the distillation of today’s noticing in the form of a haiku:
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first day
the rootedness
of everything
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See also NaHaiWriMo prompt: New Year’s day/beginnings
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one year older
I learn to notice blades
of grass
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1
New Year‘s walk
pampas grass plumes
rustle
2
so much is clear
this year too in my purse
the tides tables
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NaHaiWriMo prompt: New Year resolution/review
1
packing tackle
the fishing line teasing
the cats
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Inspired by Jane Reichhold’s ‘frayed rope’
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2
a shape no other
than the humble horseshoe
four-leaf clover
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Based on Cherie Hunter Day’s ‘a skull no bigger‘
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NaHaiWriMo prompt: Influence (another poet/haiku) This is the prompt:
Write a haiku based on/influenced by another poet’s haiku. I know, I know, we are always under someone’s influence, but still! Anything goes, except ‘old pond’
If you are stuck for choice, have a look at the link below, the Haiku Foundation’s Montage Archive, where the work of haiku poets is juxtaposed in relation to a theme, for instance, The Little Truths or any other comparative haiku piece. Or, pull on the ‘frayed rope’ here
See you there!
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against loss
sewn into the mattress
gold coins
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NaHaiWriMo prompt: gold/silver/coins
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what might have been
but for frangipani blooms
December evening
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NaHaiWriMo prompt: taking stock
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oiling
the wheel of fortune
horseshoe
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NaHaiWriMo prompt: oil
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peace and joy –
on the Christmas tree
a red felt heart
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NaHaiWriMo prompt: Good-wishes-ku

Happy Christmas and a Merry, Healthy and Joyous New Year!
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This haiga, using my haiku, was created by renowned haiga artist Kuniharu Shimizu. Kuni-san is also priest of Tenrikyo, advisor to the World Haiku Association, and judge of their haiga contests. I feel most honored that one of my snowman haiku was included in his current series of Snowman haiga.
The haiga is accompanied by a lovely commentary on his own blog, seehaikuhere. Click and see.
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1
tree of life
a stray gene from
Andromeda
2
olive tree
as blessed as it is
humble
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NaHaiWriMo prompt: Tree
December 23 prompt: All about trees. From frankincense trees, to olive and fig trees, Eucalyptus, Jacaranda, cinnamon, Christmans trees, take your pick!
I saw this piece of news re frankincense tree
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cosmic cushion –
pulling the darkness out
pin by pin
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moment of stillness
just before the light changes
direction
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NaHaiWriMo prompt: solstice. The actual prompt ran like this:
Solstice (what else?), cosmic time, longest/shortest day, cosmic light… .
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A haiku I love by Svetlana Marisova:
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incoming tide …
the writing fills
both sides
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More of her poems in the recently created page here (The link takes you to the Haiku Foundation page with several of Svetlana’s poems. Go and see!)
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1
funicular inner monologue bursting out in laughter (ku-ku)
2
snow storm
all the pigeons become
doves
(cuckoo-ku)
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My haiku plays with the misperception that pigeons are grey and doves white. I came across a site with pictures that corrected me (at least) for good: here
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NaHaiWriMo prompt runs as follows:
December 21 Prompt: Let’s have some serious fun. Pick a genre from Michael’s essay „ku-ku: Because You Can’t Have Enough Haiku“ and write a haiku in that genre. Please indicate which one you’ve picked, eg chai-ku.
See here
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count-down to solstice
two cormorants dry their wings
in the sun
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NaHaiWriMo prompt: numbers