Featuring cherita!
January 29, 2019
January 27, 2019
Happy Haiga Day!
© Diane Mayr, all rights reserved.
Text:
throwing light on
deepening cracks
in the veneer
day after day
watching it all
come unglued
Text:
throwing light on
deepening cracks
in the veneer
day after day
watching it all
come unglued
January 22, 2019
January 20, 2019
Happy Haiga Day!
Yesterday I participated in the 2019 (the third annual) Women's March, in Boston, MA. I'd say it was a great success! As always, some of the signs were a real hoot!
© Diane Mayr, all rights reserved.
Text:
women's march...
air temps in the 20's
on fire within
© Diane Mayr, all rights reserved.
Text:
women's march...
air temps in the 20's
on fire within
January 15, 2019
January 13, 2019
Happy Haiga Day!
© Diane Mayr, all rights reserved. Print courtesy NYPL Digital Collections.
Text:
she prefers the back
of an envelope to a vastness
of white
that single empty page
in her journal
a hill too steep to climb
January 8, 2019
January 6, 2019
Happy Haiga Day!
© Diane Mayr, all rights reserved. Print courtesy The New York Public Library Digital Collections.
Text:
Sixteen Varieties of Gooseberry
by George Brookshaw, 1812
It's only been a decade since
I bought my first avocado.
I still find it hard to imagine
how it once hung on a tree.
Never seen one gooseberry--not
even at the super-supermarket.
Mr. Brookshaw where did
you manage to find sixteen?
January 4, 2019
Poetry Friday--A Whole Lotta Nothin'
It's 2019 and I'm looking forward to some kind of change. The last year basically rung me out and left me in a heap. I even missed two weeks of Poetry Friday in December--something I don't think I've done since I started this blog nearly ten years ago. As far as writing is concerned--I've been going through the paces, but I don't have much of anything from the last three months of the year. I wasn't even tempted to participate in #haikuforhope. I thank those who had enough hope stored away to share.
So, what about going forward? I'm seriously considering bowing out of Poetry Fridays since I contribute little to all those who take the time to read and comment. I'll probably make a decision in the near future. I'm also planning on retiring within the next six months, so I've got a lot of chaos to look forward to.
For today I had a whole lotta nothin'. So, I hit the files to see what I wrote over the past decade during the first week of January. It will have to do...
A small poem written January 1, 2010:
In January 2, 2011 I wrote this senryu:
Just so you know, I was never able to adjust to online calendars. Paper's fine for me. (I may have gone a bit overboard though, next to my computer, in 2018, I had three small calendars! I discarded 2018 three times!)
This next one was puzzle to me when I found it, because I had no idea what inspired it. Then I came across a post about the The OEDILF. My limerick was written January 1, 2012:
On January 3, 2013, I wrote a tanka:
For many years I participated in the 15 Words of Less challenges on Laura Salas' page and this one came on January 2, 2014. I have no idea what the photo was that we used that day to inspire this poem:
January 4, 2015, Margaret Simon posted on Facebook about resurrection ferns. I was totally unfamiliar with the fern, so I looked it up and then wrote this:
It must have rained on January 6, 2016:
And on January 1, 2017, the sun was shining brightly:
And yet another weather-related haiku for January 4, 2018:
Actually, my mood has improved considerably after reading through some of my older stuff. I hope your mood has been improved, too!
Sylvia is hosting the first Round-Up of 2019! Stop by Poetry for Children where the New Year's party continues.
So, what about going forward? I'm seriously considering bowing out of Poetry Fridays since I contribute little to all those who take the time to read and comment. I'll probably make a decision in the near future. I'm also planning on retiring within the next six months, so I've got a lot of chaos to look forward to.
For today I had a whole lotta nothin'. So, I hit the files to see what I wrote over the past decade during the first week of January. It will have to do...
A small poem written January 1, 2010:
How Lovely
Cat sleeps
and sleeps and sleeps
and sleeps, not knowing,
or caring, that time
is passing.
Cat wakes
to str-e-t-c-hhh,
drink, eat, excrete
play, groom, prowl.
Then back
she goes
to circle round and round
until finally tucking
her head into her
chest, she closes
her eyes.
Cat sleeps and sleeps
and sleeps. How
lovely to be
a cat.
© Diane Mayr, all rights reserved.
In January 2, 2011 I wrote this senryu:
online calendar
gone is the satisfaction
of discarding a year
© Diane Mayr, all rights reserved.
Just so you know, I was never able to adjust to online calendars. Paper's fine for me. (I may have gone a bit overboard though, next to my computer, in 2018, I had three small calendars! I discarded 2018 three times!)
This next one was puzzle to me when I found it, because I had no idea what inspired it. Then I came across a post about the The OEDILF. My limerick was written January 1, 2012:
A charta, also known as a patch,
is paper to which drugs are attached.
Then attached to you
And kept out of view
Your ailment is simply dispatched.
© Diane Mayr, all rights reserved.
On January 3, 2013, I wrote a tanka:
cat on the sill
nuthatch upside down
through the glass
that separates their
simultaneous complaints
© Diane Mayr, all rights reserved.
For many years I participated in the 15 Words of Less challenges on Laura Salas' page and this one came on January 2, 2014. I have no idea what the photo was that we used that day to inspire this poem:
With God on Their Side
They embraced the myth,
approached the native
species sword in hand
and declared themselves
dragon-slayers.
© Diane Mayr, all rights reserved.
January 4, 2015, Margaret Simon posted on Facebook about resurrection ferns. I was totally unfamiliar with the fern, so I looked it up and then wrote this:
Text:
Resurrection Fern
The live oak
living up to
its name
provides
resurrection
& life--
through air
not bread,
water
not wine,
and it does
it in less
than a day.
© Diane Mayr, all rights reserved.
It must have rained on January 6, 2016:
pop-up storm
the gurgle of rain
through a rusted grate
© Diane Mayr, all rights reserved.
And on January 1, 2017, the sun was shining brightly:
Text:
January 1
a songbird hedge alive
in the sun
© Diane Mayr, all rights reserved.
And yet another weather-related haiku for January 4, 2018:
quick moving storm
chicken barley soup
fogs the panes
© Diane Mayr, all rights reserved.
Actually, my mood has improved considerably after reading through some of my older stuff. I hope your mood has been improved, too!
Sylvia is hosting the first Round-Up of 2019! Stop by Poetry for Children where the New Year's party continues.
January 1, 2019
Haiku Sticky #485
Happy 2019! Tomorrow I'll go back to work and will find I've forgotten all my log-ins and passwords. More than two days off and they all fly away...
© Diane Mayr, all rights reserved.
Text:
holidays past...
back at work my brain
still on vacation
© Diane Mayr, all rights reserved.
Text:
holidays past...
back at work my brain
still on vacation
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