This is amazing ….
Source: Haiku and the Brain
Posted in A Poet's Education, Images, Observations, The Daily Poems, The Reading Journals, tagged haiku and the brain research, Haiku Foundation on October 29, 2018| Leave a Comment »
Posted in Uncategorized on October 22, 2018| Leave a Comment »
The farther we go
The harder it is
To rewrite the past
© 2018 Jason A. Muckley
Posted in A Poet's Education, Rants, The Daily Poems, tagged Aimee, blue dragon, haibun, jeannine hall gailey, Nezhukumatathil, rescuing seiryu on October 22, 2018| Leave a Comment »
4. a “turn,” or a sudden change of heart, if you will, found in the third line of the prose sections. Jeannine Hall Gailey goes from introducing a seemingly easy-going, cheerful visitor to a terrifying, blood-soaked seer in her haibun “Rescuing Seiryu, the Blue Dragon”:
You met the dragon in the garden. Sometimes he flies in circles outside your window. This morning he appeared as a young boy. / He shows you a vision of your parents, lying in a barn. With his face so close you smell hay. / He bleeds from the wounds of paper birds, from a swallowed curse. Can your healing rice cake keep him from death?
https://www.poets.org/poetsorg/text/more-birds-bees-and-trees-closer-look-writing-haibun
Posted in A Poet's Education, Images, The Daily Poems, tagged Alfred Lord Tennyson, Lady of Shallott on October 18, 2018| Leave a Comment »
Posted in A Poet's Education, Images, The Daily Poems, tagged Alfred Lord Tennyson, illuminated, Morte d'Arthur on October 18, 2018| Leave a Comment »
Posted in The Daily Poems, tagged a frayed red thread, Linda Jeannette Ward, portraiture, tanka on October 6, 2018| Leave a Comment »
If I added
one narrow brushstroke
to this hazy moon
in my childhood portrait
would it change who I’ve become