Haiku #50

Here lies cigarettes
and bottle caps in dirt lot
with stories untold

cigarette
OhEngine/Shutterstock.com

This Saturday, I participated in the Hayward City Clean Up volunteer day and was assigned a certain street to pick up trash.  It was a rewarding experience to contribute to improving the city.  I was surprised to see so many cigarette butts littered on sections of the street (especially near certain apartment complexes).  At the corner of an empty dirt lot, we found a lot of cigarette butts and bottle caps.  While I am not supportive of smoking, drinking or littering, I do wonder who these people are.  Why do they smoke and why do they drink?  Is it for fun, to relieve stress or to drown out their sorrows?  Did they drink and smoke alone, or in a group?  What is their life story?  Cleaning up trash is a reactive approach to beautifying the city.  Over time, it may provide a healthier neighborhood.  However, what is the root cause of the problem?  What can we do to be more proactive to prevent this type of litter from happening in the first place?  Everyone’s story is worth hearing.

Haiku #49

A quiet morning
curled up on the recliner
reading a good book

reading-book
Image from picjumbo.com

After a week of constant meetings and deadlines, it was a blessing to hold a physical, tangible book to escape to a time before modern day technology and all of the noise, chatter and distractions that come with it.  Sometimes you just need to slow down in order to catch up 🙂

Happy New Year!

Happy New Year everyone!  I’m excited to announce that my haiku won 3rd place in the 2017 Tokutomi Haiku Contest. It was my first time writing with a kigo, so it was a fun challenge   I look forward to writing more haiku in 2018.

first morning sunrise
shines through the open window
spotless countertop

To learn more about the contest, see last year’s winners, and learn about the Yuki Teikei Haiku Society, visit: www.youngleaves.org

May your 2018 be blessed and beautiful!