
I wrote my ode to blu tack before I knew about the Haiku Diaries. In this daily blog two authors, Rachel Dickinson and Jenna Schnuer, write about their lives, and readers post comments -- all in haiku. I normally don't like poetry, but there's something so unpretentious and authentic about this simple literary form I find myself dropping by when I'm procrastinating or uninspired.
While Iron Chef competitions send the culinary big wigs darting about the kitchen like frantic bumble bees, the home galley can be a zen retreat. The rhythm of chopping vegetables, the steady chug of the dishwasher, the soothing sound of soup bubbling away. And the measured kneading of homemade bread can induce a trance-like state bordering on enlightenment. A potential haiku in every dish.
When approached with tranquility, my morning fruit becomes berry bliss. I feel calm just looking at this photo. I can't imagine shattering the serenity with a mad dash to the finish line.

Breakfast for a Nighthawk
A bowl of berries
Smoothes the edges of morning.
Bed no longer calls.
Blueberry photo by atul666 , printed under Creative Commons License.



4 comments:
Welcome to our world --
seeing haikus everywhere
can be relaxing.
Rachel, a haiku sister
thehaikudiaries.wordpress.com
Love this haiku post.
Morning has been dull so far.
Now it's looking up.
When you need focus,
wrap wayward thoughts into themes
with headline haiku.
Okay, that was my attempt to tell you in haiku that I recently read one of the coolest uses for this simple poetry form at Plaidearthworm's blog (http://plaidearthworm.blogspot.com/2008/05/poetry-as-freelance-inspiration.html)
She uses it to tie together straggling strands of thought into a cohesive article.
I LOVE your refrigerator haiku. Dead night! What an image. (I can certainly relate to the feeling. :))
Haiku headlines? What a great idea! Thanks for passing on the link. I love the name, too. Plain earthworm conjures up so many intriguing images.
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