5.29.2008

little light
lit by ten thousand--
Glory!

5.28.2008

Midnight--
thinking in staccato--
reading haiku--

5.22.2008

It's still dark outside,
throw cool water on my face,
it runs off chapped skin.

5.20.2008

wind chimes--
softly chanting angels,
mingle with the birds

5.17.2008

sunrise through petals
stained glass

peace--
my well of words run silent,
God answers.

5.15.2008

Why My Haiku Aren't 5-7-5

"A haiku is not just a pretty picture in three lines of 5-7-5 syllables each. In fact, most haiku in English are not written in 5-7-5 syllables at all--many are not even written in three lines. What distinguishes a haiku is concision, perception and awareness--not a set number of syllables. A haiku is a short poem recording the essence of a moment keenly perceived in which Nature is linked to human nature. . . The poem is refined into a touchstone of suggestiveness. In the mind of an aware reader it opens again into an image that is immediate and palpable, and pulsing with that delight of the senses that carries a conviction of one's unity with all of existence. "

-Cor Van Den Heuvel, 1987
The New York Times Book Review