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Ein OIKOS[TM]-Projekt gegen Antisemitismus, Rassismus, Extremismus und Fremdenfeindlichkeit.
Mad woman from mediocrity, muses.
Canadian Zen Haiku canadien ISSN 1705-4508
Ramblings of an Irish ecologist and gardener
Poetry of a changing Earth. The grief is real--so is the hope.
Inspiring others through the written word, fictional blurbs & documenting my writing process from scratch.
occasional musings of an itinerant seanchaí polishing his craft online
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offbeat words for you...
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Philosophy is all about being curious, asking basic questions. And it can be fun!
Not a literary magazine for ordinary times, but a journal for an exceptional one. Writing the pandemic, together. Image, Somewhere in Time by Hengki Lee: Instagram @hengki_lee
I really like this–form and such vivid images! Those bleached white bones! (We both seem to have bones lately.) 🙂
Thank you 🙂 I saw the trinitas form mentioned today and looked it up. It seems to be a less strict form of the cleave. The photo of the strange cloud is one I’ve had for a week or so waiting to write a coral poem about it.
There’s something fundamental about bones, what everything hangs on.
That’s so true. I will have to look up the form.
It’s certainly a lot easier than a cleave poem, and you don’t have to work in an opposite meaning in the two sides.
I’m going to try it soon, but not today. 🙂
It’s a morning poem 🙂
Yes, when I can think. 😀
🙂
I agree, and used so well by Jane.
Thank you, Ken 🙂
Wow! Wonderful image and beautiful writing form.
Thank you! Yes, I like this form. Interesting without being too tricky.
Shadowland. So evocative. (K)
Those images of dead coral make me think of the asphodel fields.