"Zen" by Justice Beitzel |
Last Friday, Mary Lee Hahn invited readers to "light the lanterns" and heal creative spirits with a haiku each day in December. She's calling the challenge #haikuforhealing.
Officially, Today's Little Ditty will be on break until February to recharge and tend the home fires. Unofficially, though, I'll be participating in #haikuforhealing.
I've always wanted to see if I could be successful doing something like this. In the past I've backed away from such challenges because they make me feel pressured and vulnerable. The thought of putting less-than-polished work out there for the world to see is not a comfortable one. Will this time be different? I hope so! While haiku are deceptively difficult to write well, they are short. And I've taken two steps to help encourage my success:
- I'm going public for accountability.
- I'm not going TOO public.
Would you like to join the challenge, yourself? Your company is always welcome! Feel free to share your haiku in the comments.
If you would like to read others' haiku this month, you can visit:
Mary Lee Hahn at Poetrepository
Margaret Simon at Reflections on the Teche
Heidi Mordhorst at my juicy little universe
Linda Mitchell at A Word Edgewise
Buffy Silverman at Buffy's Blog
Jone Rush MacCulloch at DeoWriter
Diane Mayr, posted on Thursdays at Random Noodling
Julie Johnson at Raising Readers and Writers
Catherine Flynn at Reading to the Core
Carol Varsalona at Beyond LiteracyLink
Carol Wilcox at Carol's Corner
Linda Baie at TeacherDance
(Leave me a note in the comments if you'd like to be added to this list.)
December Diary
#haikuforhealing
All poems © 2016 by Michelle Heidenrich Barnes. All rights reserved.
All poems © 2016 by Michelle Heidenrich Barnes. All rights reserved.
12.1.16
behind the clouds
a blank blue slate . . .
beginning again
12.2.16
new moon—
finding my way
without directions
12.3.16
staying awake
till the last box is filled
sudoku night
12.4.16
12.3.16
staying awake
till the last box is filled
sudoku night
12.4.16
SUBMITTED
12.5.16
SUBMITTED
12.6.16
weaving through traffic . . .
Dylan dreams of Bellatrix
Miranda draws cats
12.7.16
my daily stroll—
stepping out of the mind
and onto the page
12.8.16
layers today—
orange leaves on blue sky
gainesville autumn
12.9.16
endless night
listening to the tick-tock-tick
of his heart
12.10.16
SUBMITTED
12.11.16
chasing the gardener
from spring to autumn . . .
first frost
12.12.16
the old man
could still use a penny
Christmas is coming
12.13.16
silent night
fog blankets the lawn
with cotton
12.14.16
the ornament
the cat couldn't reach—
full moon
12.15.16
ghost moon . . .
she's grown accustomed
to the haunting
12.16.16
piano whispering
the pieces
I've never shared
12.17.16
winter solstice—
will the glass be half empty
or half full?
12.18.16
unblinking
their eyes rest on me
peacock feathers
12.19.16
SUBMITTED
12.20.16
jolly santa
sways but won't be swayed . . .
waits for a sign.
12.21.16
hearts
full as bellies
homecoming
12.22.16
sugar cookies—
a dusting of snow
on my plate
12.23.16
starlight
in my dreams
I hear carols
12.24.16
hoofprints
in the powdered sugar—
Christmas eve
12.25.16
lights
become comets
Christmas magic
12.26.16
the score:
one hit, one exchange
no returns
12.27.16
SUBMITTED
12.28.16
year's end—
the rose bush needs pruning
again
12.29.16
364 days
crossed off the to-do list
running tally
12.30.16
2017 . . .
setting the table
for uninvited guests
12.31.16
closed door
between me and you
knocking
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
In other news . . .
I'm honored that Irene Latham is featuring The Best of Today's Little Ditty, 2014-2015 at Live your Poem today with a short interview and a few of her favorite poems. Thank you, Irene!
Thanks also to those who are including this collection on their holiday gift giving lists. Not only is it great reading, but with thirteen different poetry challenges, it's also a useful resource for anyone who enjoys practicing different verse forms. Purchase at Amazon.com or send an email to TodaysLittleDitty (at) gmail (dot) com if you would like a signed copy.
And speaking of poetry challenges, I've never before seen such an incredible last minute showing for a DMC challenge. After Friday's wrap-up post, more than a dozen poems were submitted in the last five days of the month! I do hope you'll take another look at these poems about places of refuge and solace. With thanks, once again, to Ann Rider for the challenge.
Random.org has determined that a copy of BEFORE MORNING by Joyce Sidman, illustrated by Beth Krommes (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2016) will go to . . .
Jone Rush MacCulloch – congratulations, Jone!
Bridget Magee has something special waiting for you at wee words for wee ones. Join her for this week's Poetry Friday roundup.
I love your idea of quietly writing your haiku, and will stop in when I can. Ah, that 'blank blue slate', full of hope! Best wishes for a restful couple of months enjoying all your family and friends.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Linda. Enjoy your holidays!
DeleteMichelle, I agree with Linda that your first poem provides the hope we need in this world. I hope to create a few haikus for the challenge, maybe more if time allows but now off to work on the design of my Autumnventure Gallery.
ReplyDeleteLooking forward to your haiku and especially your Autumn gallery, Carol!
DeleteI like your plan for being public without being too public, and also for taking a break! Your haiku are great. The second one particularly speaks to me. xo
ReplyDeleteIt's the only way I could figure out how to put the blog on hiatus without my muse jumping to the conclusion that she was off the hook! ;)
DeleteI like the picture of your blank blue slate - but I love finding your way without directions. Enjoy your break. I'm hoping to pop back and read more of your not too public haiku, Michelle.
ReplyDeleteThanks Kat. Happy holidays!
DeleteYou found the perfect way to join in on your own terms. Very smart (if I might say so myself) to archive your haiku in one post (wink wink). I'll link over from Poetrepository, and that will remind me to check in.
ReplyDeleteThat first one is a good reminder for every ordinary day, but also for these times.
Oh! what a good idea.....adding a ME TOO!
DeleteYou've always been a role model, Mary Lee, in so many ways. :)
DeleteWonderful blog post.....and a well deserved rest for you to tend home fires. So happy for you and for me that gets to know you through your blog. I've also joined the #haikuforhealing invitation. It will help me keep my writing brain "open" during an overly busy season and my own crazy home fires.
ReplyDeleteGreat, Linda! I've added you to the list. And yes, keeping my "writing brain open," is exactly what I had in mind as well. Let's hope it works for both of us!
DeleteThese are beautiful, Michelle. I look forward to reading more! Have a restful, blessed holiday season!
ReplyDeleteYou too, Becky. :)
DeleteThanks for sharing your haiku, Michelle. You're such a talented poet! Each word holds just enough weight and I come away with a smile.
ReplyDeleteEnjoy your recharge.
I'm actually rather insecure in my haiku abilities... though less so now, after such a nice compliment. :) Thanks so much, Penny.
DeleteThis is a wonderful project. I love the idea of "housing" the poems on one blog post. We can see the journey, day by day. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteI thought so, too, when I noticed that's what Mary Lee was doing on her Poetrepository site!
DeleteI love that second haiku in particular - I guess it speaks to what we must do as a nation, too. Find our way out of this darkness.
ReplyDeleteI agree, Tara. I'm afraid it's going to be a long, dark road ahead.
DeleteWhat lovely haiku, Michelle. Wonderful that you're joining the challenge. Enjoy your blog break. Meanwhile, happy holidays!
ReplyDeleteHappy holidays to you, too, Jama!
DeleteSuper haiku! Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteWaking up
to a new dawn--
roosters crowing
Have a happy poetry Friday.
Now there's a wake-up call we can all relate to! Love this, Joy.
DeleteEnjoy your break, and best of luck with the haiku challenge - I have always felt the same way about challenges, they leave me feeling pressured and stressed. But, if you turn your thinking around, they can be a source of direction and inspiration, too! I look forward to following along with your creativity.
ReplyDeleteThat's true, Jane! Maybe once I get through this one, I'll be less reluctant the next time.
DeleteLovely haikus, Michelle--I especially like the new moon one--yes, it does feel like we're wandering around on a moonless night right now. But good for you for trying to find your way! Maybe I should go off and try to write a haiku too.
ReplyDeleteHooray! You did! I've added you to the list, Buffy.
DeleteLove your approach to this challenge, Michelle. You first two haiku offerings are spot on - I especially love the "blank blue slate". I am always up for beginning again. I'll be checking back to bask in your haiku healing. =)
ReplyDeleteBeginnings can be scary, but they're also invigorating. For me, the hard part is getting myself to take that first step. Thanks again for hosting today, Bridget!
DeleteI love this idea, and I love your approach to it. Perhaps I will give it a try too. I think I'll wait and see what happens tomorrow. : )
ReplyDeleteThat would be awesome if you did, Liz. You know how much I love your haiku! Will stay tuned, then.
DeleteMichelle, I am so glad to see you participating. I am going to write as well (although I am already a day late). The haiku will be on my Deowriter site.
ReplyDeleteOkay, Jone— added you to the list!
DeleteAnd woohoo on winning Before Morning!
ReplyDeleteEnjoy! :)
DeleteYou are such a positive force in our community, not only curating our poetry, but participating with such wisdom. "without directions" stood out to me. Isn't that how we are all feeling? What happened to the directions?
ReplyDeleteThanks for featuring my site, too.
Thanks so much for these kind words, Margaret. I look forward to writing haiku with you this month!
DeleteIt's hard enough to share pieces we have worked on for a long time, let alone created in a single day. I'm excited to see the results of your bravery and hard work. I love these kinds of challenges, and I may join in.
ReplyDeleteThank you for your encouragement, David. Hope you do join in!
DeleteI don't know you, David, so feel free to ignore what I have to say. Haiku is supposed to capture the essence of a moment, therefore, immediacy is important. Sometimes the spontaneous poem is the one that is most revealing. (Of course, that doesn't mean a haiku can't be improved--but don't improve it to the point where it is a poetic statement rather than an essence.)
DeleteEnjoy your respite from blogging. I only blog once a week and sometimes even that is hard for me. I like your "blank blue slate." It's a lovely image. I will try to post a haiku now and then and will try to stop by often to enjoy your poems.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Rosi. Warm wishes to you!
DeleteMichelle, I like "behind the clouds" because it allows for various interpretations. Well done, my friend!
ReplyDeleteI'll be participating, too. I will, however, only post my haiku once a week on Thursdays. I picked that day because December began on a Thursday, and each Thursday you'll get a week's worth. Please add Random Noodling to your list!
Thanks, Diane! Catch you on Thursdays. :)
DeleteBest wishes for a restful break, Michelle! I especially enjoyed reading your December 2nd offering. There are so many connections between the phases of the moon and the phases of our lives.
ReplyDeleteThat's true, Kiesha. The moon has always been our close companion. Thanks for stopping by!
DeleteYour haiku are lovely, Michelle. The form is perfect for this time of year, when our days and minds are filled with so many demands. Enjoy your well-deserved break!
ReplyDeleteThank you, Catherine. Happy holidays, my friend.
DeleteCatherine, I just read your haiku over at Reading to the Core (sorry so late to your post). Will you be writing more? I've added you to the list, but I only linked to the one post for the time being.
DeleteNice peaceful haiku, Michelle. I feel the same trepidation about your challenges each month. Especially given who is issuing them. Yet, I appreciate participating very much. Our feelings are often mixed, aren't they? I hope you're having a great weekend. I had a very busy Friday, but I'm hoping to catch up tonight. XOXO
ReplyDeleteTrue, Brenda, the feelings are usually mixed. The main problem for me with daily challenges is that I can't let poems sit for a day or two. More often than not, what I'll think is brilliant one day, will make me cringe the next! Hope you get some time to relax tomorrow. :)
DeleteSo much good news in this post! Thank you, Michelle! Your haiku are wonderful! I agree, it is hard to put one's work out there quickly without time to let it sit and ripen, as it were. <3
ReplyDeleteYep, ripe enough to detect their sweetness without attracting fruit flies. ;)
DeleteThank you for adding me to this list. What a welcoming community!
ReplyDeleteMy pleasure, Julie. :)
DeleteStopped by to check out your daily #haikusforhealing! Two of them I'm especially fond of
ReplyDelete12.4.16
the morning after—
her memory
one size too small
12.5.16
cars and clouds
on parallel highways
morning commute
So much metaphor in both of these, they're rich in layers! "cars and clouds on parallel highways" what a vision!
I'm actually writing a haiku each day, but too much going on to post.
I'll stop by again, Thanks!
Thanks, Michelle. Glad to know you're writing too~ I enjoy seeing them in my FB newsfeed! Don't forget to stop and breathe now and then. :)
DeleteI forgot that you were writing and adding here, Michelle. Oops! I've joined in too. Will you add me to the list please? Linda Baie at TeacherDance: http://www.teacherdance.org I love your words on Dec. 7th, that "stepping out of the mind/and onto the page". Thanks!
ReplyDeleteDelighted you're writing too, Linda. :)
DeleteBefore Morning does look gorgeous. Kudos to you, Michelle for going public. I am sure it must take an enormous amount of courage to take that leap too. :)
ReplyDeleteThanks Myra, not so bad as I thought, actually. But glad to have the flexibility in case I miss a day or two!
DeleteI added you to my list. Sorry for the oversight. Love these tiny glimpses into your day. Would love to take a walk with you in the layers of orange and blue.
ReplyDeleteNo worries, Margaret. I'll take a raincheck for that walk!
DeleteWhat a great range, Michelle--I enjoyed meeting Dylan and Miranda (my kids are Daisy Miranda and Duncan!), and I especially like 12.4 and 12.9. Hm--it doesn't surprise me that you have a particular way with the ones about people (or perhaps creatures). Looking forward to my anthology, and sorry to leave you off my list--which I copied from YOU!
ReplyDeleteNot a problem about the list, Heidi. I had a feeling that might have been how it happened. :) Besides, you have great taste in names!
DeleteOh, I didn't know exactly what the #haikuforhealing challenge was. Thanks, Michelle, for explaining. I'm going to join in now, 1/3 of the way through the month:>) Your Dec 7 (my daily stroll) totally captures how I am dealing with life:>)
ReplyDeleteThat's terrific, Laura! So glad you're joining in. :)
DeleteJust spent some time strolling through your December...and the comments. Exactly the healing I needed after a rough day yesterday--that included political argument. again. still. Haiku is really top shelf medicine.
ReplyDeletexoxoxox
Thanks for checking in, Linda. Sorry for your rough day! I'm starting to think a haiku a day may be in order for the next four years. xo
DeleteI salute and smile at your Gainesville autumn, blue and orange indeed. (While living in Florida if I ever had to choose I'd choose against FSU, simply because I had upstairs neighbors who were wont to dance around doing the tomahawk chop at 3 a.m.)
ReplyDeleteLOL!
DeleteI adore that haiku about the old man and the penny, a favorite childhood song!
ReplyDeleteI remember singing it over and over... an earworm even back then!
DeleteMichelle, your collection of haikus are lovely. I especially like the ghost moon one. I would like to capture your 12.11.16 haiku for my Autumnventure Gallery because I have been chasing my gardener to sweep away all the leaves. I am so thrilled to receive your book in the mail that I am including it in today's PF post.
ReplyDelete12/11 is all yours, Carol! I'll be sure to stop by and check out your PF post too. Thanks. :)
DeleteHello, Friend - I share your hesitancy to publicize less than fully cooked poetry; yet that can help us grow sometimes, too (preaching to my control-freak self).
ReplyDeleteThere are some lovely haiku in this collection; maybe you'll add "submit new poems to journals" to your super-busy to-do list for the new year? ;0) I'm particularly drawn to "endless night." XO
Hello, Friend! My control-freak self thanks your control-freak self for the sound and somewhat scary advice and suggestion. :) I think I may well and truly have become addicted to this Haiku-a-day way of life. xo
Deleteahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh, catching up with your haiku after a few days. Wonderful balm for the soul. Whispering piano. I think each of us in the family has sat down and plunked on the keys for some Christmas melody. My boys have a recital tomorrow. Children making music is another balm for my soul. I have to say that the ornament that cat couldn't reach is my favorite though. ha! Well done. And, comments of so many wonderful poets and readers restores me. Have a great week.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Linda. Cheers to Christmas piano plunking and good luck to your boys for their recital!
DeleteLove the moon-kus on 12/14 and 12/15. I love remembering that we see the same moon even though we're thousands of miles away.
ReplyDeleteIt is a comforting thought, Mary Lee. Thanks for dropping by!
DeleteLove the "peacock feathers" & that light of the phone. I finally realized it was my phone dinging with a calendar reminder in the middle of the night-turned off!
ReplyDeletePersistent little buggers, these phones. Especially yours!
DeleteMerry Christmas eve, Michelle. Love that 'dusting of snow", then connected to the "hoof prints".
ReplyDeleteClearly I've been having such a good time, I forgot to respond to this! Thanks for leaving your own sweet footprints on my blog, Linda.
DeleteGood Morning. I'm stopping by to catch up and fill up on some beautiful haikuforhealing. You make me giggle with your references to powdered sugar. Oh, the sugar I've consumed in the past week. I know it's going to take powerful work to work it off....but it's been so tasty!
ReplyDeleteOld Man Winter asleep at the wheel certainly explains our 66 degree weather here yesterday. I'd like a good hard frost at least....and snow at most. Beautiful words and thoughts here. Thank you for sharing.
You and me both, Linda. I'm nearly to the point of sugar overload... but not quite. ;) And as for the Old Man, we've been in the low 80's for a week now, when we should be having the temperatures you're getting (upper 60's)! What a wacky winter. Happy (almost) new year!
DeleteOh, those last two haiku. They get me. uninvited guests and a closed door. Sigh. It's up to the artists to make things right. See you on the other side.
ReplyDeleteSee you on the other side, Linda. :)
DeleteCongratulations on 31 beautiful poems. There's something about the simplicity of a haiku that makes the reader add in so many of their own thoughts to the work. On one of your last ones, the words, "Setting the table," got me so excited for the coming year. I also wrote a haiku a day, but am not sharing them with anyone :-)
ReplyDeleteThank you, David, and congratulations on reaching the haiku finish line! Wishing you an exciting and inspired 2017. :)
Delete