Tuesday, February 28, 2012

moon on waves haiku

moon
on the waves
night undulates



haiku beach

spring beach
seaweed tangled
with beer cans


Her Rosary Beads






After my father died,
I went to mass with my mother
to partake in her daily rituals,
be closer to her.

She still sat in the same pew,
one we filled as a family years ago.
Her leather bound missal
on the slot in front of her.
Photos slid from pages,
laminated faces smiled at me,
memoriam cards
bookmarking her favourite psalms.


Her glass rosary beads knotted around her fingers
she caressed each bead in prayer.
Soothed by her lisping whispers
I watched her pray,
as her beads tinkled
against the polished pew.
Her eyes closed,
face raised in adoration
to some uncharted world beyond,
I saw my father walking free,
reunited with the smiling faces.
Tears traced the lines of her powdered face
and my tears silently trickled too.
Comforted by her devotion,
credence in decades of the rosary,
the mysteries became tangible.
Like a cord connecting us,
the chain on her beads,
linked me to the afterlife,
a place I could not readily accept
before.

My mother is closer now,
the cord of life, so strong.
My father’s wish
uniting us from beyond.

tidepool haiku

exploring
a world of tide pools
childhood memories

umbrella haiku

gale force winds
an umbrella and I
in a twist


sun shower
under an umbrella
lovers kiss

haiga euryops


murky day
the first euryops daisy
a gift of sunshine

haiga for Bernadette and Rachael Stanley xx


all the way home
cherry blossoms bloom
lunch with the girls

Spirited Magpies





Magpies,
playfully exchange trees.
Alternating between birch and maple,
they compete for the highest branches.
Striking and athletic,
I delight in their performance.

From close proximity,
their plumage flashes a metallic blue
white underbellies,
lustrous as virgin snow.
Strutting boastfully
lofty tails held high,
I contemplate their beauty.
Standing solid
against an lifeless sky,
feathers ruffled,
they remain
statuesque,
spirited.

Moving in pairs.
My superstitious mind
cites “two for joy”.
I wonder in amusement
if the most dominant one
on the arched limb of my silver birch
is my father’s spirit?
His characteristics
are so similar.

Haiga Forsythia

golden dawn
forsythia blooms
yellow the driveway


Funeral haiku

murky morning
my world shrouded
in grey


funeral home
spotting a makeup stain
on his tie

body laid out
placing a carnation
in his buttonhole

his corpse
without pain
youthful again

handshakes
of condolence
amassing his life

crumpled tissues
side by side in the bin
estranged siblings

numbed by
his numbness
a final parting


grief stricken
the warmth of her tears
consoling


grief stricken
the taste her tears
comforting


funeral day
the heavens open
in sympathy


brothers
shoulder the coffin
the weight of mother



dogwood hedgerows
my father reunited
with his dog



foggy day
his passing
sinking in

RIP Dad 26 January 2012


Haiga between palm trees