Renewed usefulness
container of protection
a transformation
Your Custom Text Here
Renewed usefulness
container of protection
a transformation
Escher edifice
dark, light, movement and stillness
living and dying
Solitary walk
led to unexpected gift
hidden in plain sight
Seasonal attire
protecting others and me
fashion statement yet?
A cloud of blossoms
Ethereal and fleeting
Takes my breath away
Thinking of Indra’s net
How we are all connected
For good and for ill
Real leaders are brave
Strength in saying I don’t know
Scared for our country
LIfe’s intersections
Fear, hope, anger, sadness, joy
Converging today
HaikuChallenge20 Redux
Fear is contagious
Isolate to stay healthy
Missing connection
Pale green shoots emerge
Spring didn’t get the memo
Life is not on hold
We are nurses, physicians, patients, editors, beekeepers, writers, educators, parents, grandparents, partners and spouses….we live on the east coast, west coast, and midwest of the U.S. While we are separated by distance we are coming together as humans learning to navigate a global pandemic and invite you to join us. Let’s connect together around a #haikuchallenge20 redux. Each January we join together to write a haiku a day for a month on Twitter and other social media platforms using the hashtag #haikuchallenge with the addition of the last two digits of the year (#haikuchallenge20). We think it is time for a #HaikuChallenge20 redux. Why haiku? Haiku are poems structured in form and simplicity, accessible to many ages and literacy levels. They invite observation, thoughts and emotions that are grounded in the present. Haiku are micro poems that can be said in one breath yet profoundly express many aspects of the human experience. You can follow the simple structure of 3 lines composed of 5 syllables, 7 syllables, 5 syllables or be more freeform. They invite connection around ambiguity. We need haiku more than ever in our “new normal” of COVID-19.
Brian @storkbrian states, “Haiku helps me rationalize the irrational” and shares his haiku of the myriad of emotions that surround us now:
Sirens of safety
Arrogance and ignorance
Global pandemic
Kids on tricycles
Welcome, needed distraction
Spring is in the air
Britta @britta34 adds, “What a weird time to be alive. I think using haiku will be a good, quick way to express the terror in this lifetime, but especially during this pandemic, especially when resources are shutting down and we are being shut-in”
Panic, it fills me
A week ago, let's go back
I finally had hope
Old trauma looks good
Sort of better in a sense
The whole world was fine
Like flipping a coin
It feels like the end of all
Loving kindness time
Max @tpjmax has these thoughts: “I’ve been going through some challenges of late and have found that writing haiku has brought me some solace. It is introspection without isolation, solitude without loneliness; a means of finding connection from within. Bitter humor and anger have filled much of my haiku recently, but then I remind myself to find the connections in nature, to look around, to see with deeper vision, and a shift happens. I’m looking for humor less bitter, more connection, and a lightness in these dark times.”
In finding healing
A haiku is of value
When shared, creates touch
To shelter at home
Removed from humanity
Peace: haiku writing
Toilet paper and
Disinfectant or water
Empty market shelves
Corona virus
Quarantine preserving health
Search for connection
Now turn off the news
Turn in to your life, your home
Find the essential
As we are pulled into the ever-changing vortex, we lose ourselves in fear, anxiety and isolation. The act of writing haiku can be both reflective and connecting. It can create a shared understanding of the human condition — and help us build our resilience together. Please join us as we launch #haikuchallenge20 redux…post as often as you like using the hashtag #haikuchallenge20 on Twitter, Instagram and Facebook. We are in this together.
@pamressler
@storkbrian
@britta34
@tpjmax