Defining Haiku here at Lunch Break that's 30 days, November 1st - 30th of haiku features
Yesterday evening, i meet in person, for the first time, a haiku friend from the USA. Tye is a member of my Patch Work haiku group and participates in several collaborations, here at Lunch Break. Though Tye is absolutely not a cheese eater, we agree to meet and lime at Roxy Pizza Hut, after negotiating a cheese free serving of meatballs and spaghetti for him, and personal pineapple and ham pizza and a glass of white wine for me, we slip into a lovely meal, and talk about haiku and haiku friends we have in common, oh and at some point the music of Trinidad and Tobago. I gift Tye with a copy of my first haiku publication 'Moments'. We eat and talk and talk and talk until near time for his folks to come pick him up. Tye is so gracious, he says he doesn't mind at all having to carry the book wrapped in a plastic bag; he being a haijin is rarely empty handed, he always has a notebook or pencil in hand. Tye is flying back home to the USA today. Wishing Tye a safe and comfortable flight. Hope your visit to Trinidad enriches you in a marvelous haiku way
gibbous moon -
the smiles of two haijin
who finally meet
--gillena cox
Today's note - haibun
Sometimes haiku is teamed with prose in telling a story; when this occurs, the haijin has extended into the realm of haibun. And here the haiku should complement, and add dimension to the prose which is written in present tense even if retelling a past happening
I invite you to share some of your expertise on haibun with me
Thank you Adelaide for
ALONE
-- by Adelaide B. Shaw
Coffee in the café, her daily routine. Many of the same faces. Busy people. Lonely people. Happy. Sad. She was one of many. Who cared? Did she? Not enough. Would she die like this, uncaring and uncared for?
full winter moon
in the wind
shadows touch
Contemporary Haibun On-line Sept 2010
Today's tag
lovely meetings of mind and soul and ART x
ReplyDeletesurely Lorraine
ReplyDeletemuch love...
How lovely to meet someone you know from reading his haiku. What a delightful visit you must have had.
ReplyDeleteAdelaide
Haibun can be about memories, a travel account (but not written like a travel guide)a description of a present event, a study in nature, even a bit of fiction.
ReplyDeleteHere us one I wrote after observing for several days a lone woman in a cafe.It combines a description of an observed event with a bit of fiction.
ALONE
by Adelaide B. Shaw
Coffee in the café, her daily routine. Many of the same faces. Busy people. Lonely people. Happy. Sad. She was one of many. Who cared? Did she? Not enough. Would she die like this, uncaring and uncared for?
full winter moon
in the wind
shadows touch
Contemporary Haibun On-line Sept 2010
Adelaide
Thank you Adelaide for visiting and sharing
ReplyDeletemuch love...