Showing posts with label environment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label environment. Show all posts

Friday, August 22, 2025

A Room of My Own: Smoky Silence Haiku

smoky silence
crater after crater
rainbowed with oil


Added:

elbows up, elbows down ...
the PM's mouth opens and closes
in summer heat


FYI: CBC News, August 22, 2025: Unfortunately, there may not be a hockey analogy for the challenge Canada faces: Are Mark Carney's elbows up or down? Does it matter?

"There is a time in a game, in a big game — and this is a big game — when you go hard in the corners with your elbows up. There's a time in the game when you drop your gloves in the first period and you send a message. And we've done that, pretty uniquely in the world," Carney responded, attempting to broaden the hockey analogy.


Added:

berry picking
I lick the stains
off her fingers


Added:

after our picnic
the heat comes on
between us
the honey melon juice
dripping off the table edge

Friday, July 11, 2025

A Room of My Own: Toy Forest Tanka

Against the Drowning Noise of Other Words, CC: "US-made bombs"

a toy forest
in his biscuit tin ...
the boy holds it tight
as US-made bombs drop
silencing the world below


FYI: The following entry could be read as its sequel

CLXXXI: "things hidden in ears"
inspired by Mosab Abu Toha's poem, "Things You May Find Hidden in My Ear"

doctor, you may find
these things hidden in my ears
a boy murmurs ...
buzzing of drones, roar of fighter jets
screams of Gazans, living and dead


And FYI: The Guardian, March 29, 2024:‘Ecocide in Gaza’: does scale of environmental destruction amount to a war crime? 

Satellite analysis revealed to the Guardian shows farms devastated and nearly half of the territory’s trees razed. Alongside mounting air and water pollution, experts says Israel’s onslaught on Gaza’s ecosystems has made the area unlivable.


Added: Against the Drowning Noise of Other Words, CCI: "green and red zones"

this shifting maze
of green and red zones in Gaza...
life and death 
measured in footsteps
across one rubble-lined "street"


FYI: The Nation, July 9, 2025: The Impossible Geography of Survival in Gaza
Israel has created “green zones” and “red zones” to distinguish between safe and dangerous areas. There’s little difference.


Added: Against the Drowning Noise of Other Words, CCII: "the Palestinian key"

a Gazan man
murmurs to himself
a dream, and yet ...
his ten-year-old bloodied son
holds the key tight and tighter 


FYI: Many Palestinians kept the keys to their homes when they were forced into exile in 1948. The Palestinian key is a potent symbol of their homes lost in the Nakba, often used in the protests. 

And "Israel's oldest and most progressive daily founded in 1918, Haaretz," which was was sanctioned by the Israeli government on Nov. 24, 2024

Editorial, July 16, 2025: As the Bodies Pile Up, the Israeli Public Remains Indifferent to the Daily Killing in Gaza

Since the end of the cease-fire on March 18, at least 7,261 people have been killed in the Gaza Strip.


Added: Trump Empire, Inc, XLV

tariffs today
TACO tomorrow ... in heat
a stray chases its tail 

FYI: Trump Always Chickens Out (TACO), also known as the TACO Trade.

Friday, January 10, 2025

A Room of My Own: Valley of Smoke Tanka

No More Fairy Tales, XL

the morning sun
choked out by columns of black ...
car after car 
driving through the valley of smoke
as tongues of fire leap behind


FYI: My haiku below could be read as a sequel:

No More Fairy Tales, VI

tongues of forest fires 
there's no Plan[et] B, the rest
blah, blah, blah ...



Added: No More Fairy Tales, XLI

morning sun barely seen street after street charred by the frames


Added: No More Fairy Tales, XLII

tongues of flame
grow longer and wilder
with raging hate and lies ...
a raven's kraa-kraa-kraa
atop the Mar-a-Lago flagpole


Added: No More Fairy Tales, XLIII

a stairway
what remains of a burned house ...
Pacific Coast sunset


FYI: The following haiku with a prefatory note could be read as a sequel: 

On my return from Tsukushi at the close of March, I found that my hut had been destroyed by fire. Looking at the ruins, I composed this verse.

violets here and there
in the ruins 
of my burnt house

Haiku Mind: 108 Poems to Cultivate Awareness and Open Your Heart

Shokyu-ni


Added:

patches of fog
shroud this orphanage ...
un/knowing the past


FYI: This haiku could be read as a sequel of my haiku below:

jigsaw puzzle:
group-home kids piece together
“American Dream”

Touch of a Moth: 2012 Haiku Canada Members' Anthology
(Note: American Dream is FX Schmid's award-winning 750-piece jigsaw puzzle)

hand-me-down dream
twilight laughter drifting
from the orphanage

Monday, November 4, 2024

A Room of My Own: Smoggy Sunrise Haiku

No More Fairy Tales, XXXVII

leafless trees rub
against the smoggy sunrise
smell of the wind


FYI: BBC News, Nov.3: Schools close in Lahore as pollution hits record level

Unprecedented air pollution in the Pakistani city of Lahore has forced authorities to close all primary schools for a week.

From Monday, 50% of office workers will also work from home, as part of a "green lockdown" plan. Other measures include bans on engine-powered rickshaws and vendors that barbecue without filters...

Raja Jehangir Anwar, a senior environment official, said the "biggest headache" causing the smog was the practice of burning crop waste, known as stubble, across the Indian border.

Aurangzeb said the fumes were “being carried by strong winds into Pakistan”.


And this haiku could be read as a sequel to its preceding entry:

No More Fairy Tales, XXXVI

New Delhi draped
in layers of toxic haze
this sense of dread
as October rolls around
chokingly dark... and darker



FYI: New Delhi started the week with a PM 2.5 concentration nearly 80 times the World Health Organization’s recommended limit, according to Swiss air quality company IQAir (2023 survey) 


Added: Against the Drowning Noise of Other Words, CXXII: "bombed schools"

a drift of olive leaves ...
my Gazan friend's kin living
in various bombed schools


FYI: This haiku is a sequel to the following:
Against the Drowning Noise of Other Words, CXIX: "olive harvest in the West Bank"

the sun glints
on a settler's M-16 ...
olive harvest



Added: Between Heaven and Hell, I

Two Americas

the White House
surrounded by a metal fence 
ten feet high ...
this is America, and yet
the other America

this chilly night
stretching thousands of miles
behind the day
November 6th, the veil thinnest
between Heaven and Hell

Not Going Back
painted in large blue letters
on the billboard
in autumn morning chill
Not crossed out with red paint

raindrops stream
down Lady Liberty's face ...
in my mind's eye
atop the White House roof
the stars & stripes upside-down


FYI: "The other America" first appeared in Martin Luther King Jr's "March 14, 1968" speech (where he was interrupted over and over by hecklers calling him a traitor), describing the differences in what life is like for Black/African-Americans. And Former U.S. Senator and former presidential candidate John Edwards used the "Two Americas" concept in a 2004 speech, making it into a catch phrase referring to social stratification.

And Haaretz, Nov. 6: Trump's Win Reveals the Inconvenient Truths About America

These two Americas are generally divided by two fault lines – education and gender – and are underlined by two very different political-social-cultural coalitions. Political scholar and journalist Ron Brownstein encapsulated them astutely and incisively as "transformative" and "restorative."

The "transformative" Democratic coalition is a diverse grouping made up of women, non-white Americans, voters with college degrees, urbanites and big metropolitan suburbanites, liberals and younger voters.

The "restorative" Republican electoral coalition is predominantly white, male, lower-middle class or working class, rural or living in a town of less than 100,000, without a college degree (mostly), earning less than $100,000 and angry that the America they know is "being taken away from them" by those liberal coastal elites who control the government.

Tuesday, February 13, 2024

Butterfly Dream: Permafrost Haiku by Debbie Strange

English Original

permafrost
a polar bear’s paws
sink deeper


Debbie Strange


Chinese Translation (Traditional)

永凍土
一隻北極熊的爪子
陷得更深

Chinese Translation (Simplified)

永冻土
一只北极熊的爪子
陷得更深


Bio Sketch

Debbie Strange is an award-winning Canadian short form poet, haiga artist, and photographer. Keibooks released her second full-length poetry collection, Three-Part Harmony: Tanka Verses in 2018, and Folded Word published her haiku chapbook, A Year Unfolding in 2017. An archive of publications may be accessed at http://debbiemstrange.blogspotcom/

Wednesday, November 29, 2023

A Room of My Own: Cop-Out Tanka

No More Fairy Tales, XXIII
written on the eve of COP28 hosted by Sultan al-Jabe, the Oil Chief of the U.A.E., a petrostate which is one of the hottest places on Earth.

Dubai skyline
silhouetted against sunset
private jet
after private jet landing
for a climate cop-out


Note: This is a sequel to my COP27 tanka below:
written to this "ridiculously photogenic" Talker, Justin Trudeau, Prime Minister of Canada, the fourth most polluting country per capita in 2022, a country of gas-guzzling car enthusiasts.

COP 1, 2, 3 ...
these endless climate talks 
like crows' caw-caw-caw --
between Canada's plan and action
this Nunavut-sized gap



FYI: CBC News, Nov.27: COP28 host used climate talks to push for oilpatch deals, including in Canada: Leaked briefing documents reveal plans to discuss fossil fuel projects with 15 nations.

The Tyee, Nov. 29: Danielle Smith Heads to COP28 to Sell Fossil Fuels: Premier plans to pitch carbon capture and Alberta’s ‘clean’ oil and gas at climate summit.

And The New Yorker, Nov. 25: The Road to Dubai: The latest round of international climate negotiations is being held in a petrostate. What could go wrong?

...There have now been twenty-seven cops; this week marks the opening of the twenty-eighth, which will be held in Dubai. Over the years, everything cop-related has grown bigger and more elaborate. This year’s session is expected to attract some seventy thousand people—enough to populate a small city...As cop has grown and grown, so, too, of course, has the problem it’s supposed to address. In 1995, global carbon-dioxide emissions amounted to twenty-three billion metric tons. This year, the total is expected to be about thirty-seven billion tons, an increase of around sixty per cent. Meanwhile, cumulative emissions—which, from a climate perspective, are what count—have doubled. Among scientists, it is widely agreed that the planet is approaching critical “tipping points,” if it hasn’t already crossed them. “Life on planet Earth is under siege,” is how a recent scientific paper put it.

...“cops are the only place where the most vulnerable countries have a seat at the table,” Jennifer Morgan, Germany’s special envoy for international climate action, told me. “And that is so important because it changes the dynamics. It forces the largest emitters to sit across the table from countries like Vanuatu and listen to what it means if we don’t act.” (Vanuatu, in the South Pacific, is another country that could easily be wiped out by sea-level rise.)

And Global News. Dec. 1: A United Nations report criticized Canada last month, calling it the country with the widest gap between its promises and actual climate action. Now, Canada is pledging $16 million [merely a rounding error in the Canadian federal government budget] for a climate disaster fund. 

And The Guardian, Dec. 3: COP28 president says there is ‘no science’ behind demands for phase-out of fossil fuels

I’m not in any way signing up to any discussion that is alarmist. There is no science out there, or no scenario out there, that says that the phase-out of fossil fuel is what’s going to achieve 1.5C

-- Sultan Al Jaber , President of COP28 and Oil Chief of the U.A.E., a petrostate 


AddedNo More Fairy Tales, XXIV

this weight
of something un/spoken
the world's largest iceberg 
breaks free, drifting somewhere


Note: This could be read as a prequel to my tanka below:

this world of reduction: 
of fingers lost to frostbite
of lives lost to depression ...
in the morning sunshine
another polar bear drifts off

 

FYI: NewScientist, Nov. 27: Where is the iceberg that broke off Antarctica and is it a threat?

...An iceberg more than three [not four] times the size of New York City began drifting again after being stuck on the seafloor for nearly 40 years

Chad Greene at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California  says it is clear that icebergs are breaking off Antarctica at a faster rate than snow is adding mass to the ice, “meaning climate change is causing the Antarctic Ice Sheet to lose mass at a significant rate”.

Researchers have been shocked by recent climate extremes in Antarctica, including record-high temperatures and vast areas of missing sea ice, which serve to buffer the continent’s ice shelves from warmer water and waves.

And CTV News, Nov. 24: World's largest iceberg breaks free, heads toward Southern Ocean

It's rare to see an iceberg of this size on the move, said British Antarctic Survey glaciologist Oliver Marsh, so scientists will be watching its trajectory closely...an iceberg of this scale has the potential to survive for quite a long time in the Southern Ocean, even though it's much warmer, and it could make its way farther north up toward South Africa where it can disrupt shipping.


Added: This Brave New World, CXIV

children's blood
flows beyond the pages
of War and Peace
my friend's loss of passion
and of her writing dream


Added: This Brave New World, CXV
written on the eve of the ceasefire's end

the call to prayer 
a half-ruined mosque
in twilit Gaza

FYI: Reuters, Nov. 30: In Gaza, call to prayer rings out from bombarded mosque

Balanced on a steep slab of fissured concrete with rods of twisted metal poking out and the remnants of a dome slanted at a 45-degree angle behind him, a young muezzin in a baseball cap called Muslims to prayer from atop a bombarded mosque in Gaza.

Wednesday, September 6, 2023

A Room of My Own: September Sizzle Haiku

No More Fairy Tales, XXIII

this stillness
between a black bear and me
September sizzle


FYI: In recent years, bear sightings have been increasing in the Greater Toronto Area (GTA), Guelph, London and other parts of southwestern Ontario.

And also CBC News, August 5: Bears, bears, everywhere in Prince George, British Columbia, Canada, as animals come to the city seeking food

It seems almost anywhere you go in Prince George right now, you might run into a black bear.

"We usually only have rare sightings. Now it is a daily occurrence."

The animals tend to be very site-specific, she says, moving to where food can be found.

Bowinn Ma, B.C.'s minister of emergency management and climate readiness, said at a press conference this week that parts of the province are seeing berry crop failure due to unprecedented drought, and that may be driving bears into cities seeking food.

That could be the case in Prince George, which had an unusually early spring and has sustained the highest average temperature on record for weeks, leading to Saskatoon berries and blueberries ripening and drying out weeks earlier than usual.


AddedRe-Homing in the Maple Land, X

this millionaire
flips house after house ...
not quite 30
and already his smile 
wider than Charlie Chaplin's


FYI: The Chaplin smile is unusual, produced by a muscle that most people can’t move deliberately. Charlie Chaplin could, for this smile, in which the lips angle upward much more sharply than they do in the felt smile, was his hallmark. It is a supercilious smile that smiles at smiling... excerpted from "The Science of Smiling" by Paul Ekman, psychologist and co-discoverer of micro expressions

And for more about character tanka, see To the Lighthouse: Character/Persona Tanka


AddedNo More Fairy Tales, XXIV

Brazil cyclone
Europe floods and another
Earth heat record ....
the more I read, the more I'm stuck
in a corner of my mindscape


FYI: The American Psychological Association and ecoAmerica have defined eco-anxiety (aka climate anxiety) as “a chronic fear of environmental doom.” This fear can stem from direct experience of extreme weather events and environmental change (e.g., floods, forest fires, hurricanes, drought) or exposure to climate change information through news media and other sources... excerpted from Mental Health Commission of Canada, "Understanding and Coping with Eco-Anxiety," Apr 21, 2023


Added: Re-Homing in the Maple Land, XI

O Canada! Our home and native land!

leather-bound volumes
of parliamentary debates
stacked on shelves...
PM looks out the window
at pop-up tents on the street

your home, my home 
we're united for our common home
let's bring it home ....
the opposition leader chants 
to the clicking of cameras

FYI: CTV News, September 8: Pierre Poilievre pitches 'common sense' as Conservative policy convention kicks off, delegates energized

And Press progress, September 5: Big Real Estate Executives Among Top Donors to Pierre Poilievre’s Conservatives.

Executives at big real estate companies profiting off and even driving up high real estate prices across Canada are listed as donors to the federal Conservative Party, Elections Canada records show.

Thursday, August 10, 2023

A Room of My Own: Wind-Whipped Wildfires Haiku

No More Fairy Tales, XVI

wind-whipped wildfires
wave after wave of people fleeting 
into the ocean


FYI: NBC News, August 10: Maui fires live updates: At least 36 dead as thousands flee 'unprecedented' disaster: Crews continue to battle Maui and the Big Island fires, which have been fanned in part by strong winds from Hurricane Dora, a Category 4 storm.

And Democracy Now, August 11: Fire Expert Says Climate & Native Vegetation Changes Fueled Explosive Maui Wildfires

“This is something that is absolutely unprecedented,” says Clay Trauernicht, a professor in the Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Management, University of Hawaii at Mānoa, where he focuses on wildland fire management in Hawaii and the Pacific. He explains how colonial landscape changes to the islands — prioritizing monocrop agriculture and land use for tourism — paired with the worsening atmospheric effects of climate change have set the conditions that sparked the devastating wildfires and allowed them to rage indiscriminately.


This haiku is a sequel to the following one:

No More Fairy Tales, XV

wave after wave of heat
please press ?
for more Q&As


And This haiku is a sequel to the following one:

No More Fairy Tales, VI
for Greta Thunberg

tongues of forest fires 
there's no Plan[et] B, the rest
blah, blah, blah ...



Added: No More Fairy Tales, XVII

Day and Night Quest

he runs with dogs
in his shorts and flip-flops ...
cloud after cloud
of smoke and ashes billowing 
over once-white-sand beaches

fleeing with dogs
through blaze after blaze
in gathering dark
he climbs up to the clifftop
while leaving his future behind 


Added: No More Fairy Tales, XVIII

HR in red
scrawled on a half-burnt door ...
the barks 
of cadaver dogs
echo in smoky twilight


FYI: HR stands for human remains. And Associated Press, August 13: As the death toll from a wildfire that razed a historic Maui town climbed to 93, authorities warned that the effort to find and identify the dead was still in its early stages. The blaze is already the deadliest U.S. wildfire in more than a century.


AddedRe-Homing in the Maple Land, VI

with his beagle
an air-guitar busker 
singing out loud
shoulda, coulda, woulda
story of my vagrant life


AddedRe-Homing in the Maple Land, VII

Billionaire Bunker
a man-made barrier island
in the Sunshine State ...
bathed in sweat, I ask my bunk-bed mate 
to turn off the TV and sleep

FYI: Fox Business, August 12: Jeff Bezos buys $68 million mansion in Miami's exclusive "Billionaire Bunker:"Jeff Bezos and fiancée, Lauren Sanchez, are expected to bulldoze the site and build a new mega mansion.

Friday, July 7, 2023

A Room of My Own: The Quietest Place Tanka

No More Fairy Tales, XIII

an explorer
once murmured, the quietest place
I've ever been ...
wind-sculpted ice cliffs, sperm whales
penguins -- and now cruise ships


FYI: Ls 2&3 are the remark made by the famed Norwegian explorer, Erling Kagge (Flow, Dec. 20, 2020: "Erling Kagge: The Famed Norwegian Explorer on Silence, Philosoph, and Summiting Everest")

And The Atlantic, July 3 2023: "The Last Place on Earth Any Tourist Should Go."

Traveling to Antarctica is a carbon-intensive activity. Flights and cruises must cross thousands of miles in extreme conditions, contributing to the climate change that is causing ice loss and threatening whales, seals, and penguins. By one estimate, the carbon footprint for a person’s Antarctic cruise can be roughly equivalent to the average European’s output for a year, because cruise ships are heavy polluters and tourists have to fly so far. 

This tanka is a sequel to the following one I wrote about the Arctic region:

this world of reduction: 
of fingers lost to frostbite
of lives lost to depression ...
in the morning sunshine
another polar bear drifts off



AddedNo More Fairy Tales, XIV

a massive chunk
of Greenland's ice cap
has broken off ...
her silence sets the tone
for our talk going nowhere


Added: reading between the lives and writing between the lines, LXXII

Freedom Isn't Free

in morning breeze
it takes the chimp minutes
to step outside
of its decades-old cage ...
this sky with no metal bars

gazing for hours
up at this endless blue
the freed chimp
at the edge of the refuge
now the center of its world


FYI: The title is taken from Paul Colwell's song of the same name:

Freedom isn’t free! Freedom isn’t free!
You’ve got to pay a price,
You’ve got to sacrifice
For your liberty.

Freedom is a word often heard today,
But if you want to keep it there’s a price to pay.
Each generation’s got to win it anew,
‘Cause it’s not something handed down to you.

Freedom isn’t free! … etc.

There was a gen’ral by the name of George,
With a small band of men at Valley Forge,
Left the comfort of home for the snow and ice,
They won independence ’cause they paid the price.

Freedom isn’t free! … etc.

For some people freedom is a waving flag,
To do your own thing is another man’s bag,
But for ev’ry man freedom’s the eternal quest.
You’re free to give humanity your very best.

Freedom isn’t free! … etc.

Tuesday, July 4, 2023

Poetic Musings: Summer Haze Haiku by H. Gene Murtha

summer haze --
a crow flaps free
of the asphalt 

Frogpond, 27:1, 2004

H. Gene Murtha

Commentary: This is a haiku which reveals its grim meaning gradually. Line one is subtly paradoxical. In Japanese haiku there are particular words to refer to the ‘haze’ or ‘mist’ of spring and the ‘fog’ of autumn and winter – all with the potential of beauty. This is not what is alluded to here. This is a heat haze, created perhaps by petroleum fumes. Such beauty as it has is illusory. Line two shows a crow apparently flying freely; however, line three reveals this too is an illusion. It is freeing itself from the ensnarement of bitumen, perhaps from a natural tar pit, perhaps from a road surface, perhaps from a tar sands tailings pond. The ‘haze’ of line one now seems like the optical illusion of water apparently shimmering on a summer roadway. The dragging effort involved in the bird’s apparent escape is suggested by the alliteration, the repeated ‘f’s’ catching in the reader’s mouth as teeth make contact with bottom lip. The bird’s freedom may well be temporary.

First impressions mislead in this haiku. The crow is likely to have been soiled by the black sticky substance that had trapped it. Its contamination may be permanent, though not immediately apparent on its black, shining wings. Images of seabirds mired in oil slicks may come to the reader’s mind. This is another poem that ultimately treats a wild creature’s problematic survival with simple, unflinching directness.

Yet, Murtha’s position is not always that of an observer of despoliation and loss. He appears to write with such subtle power about destruction and degradation because his work recognises the value of what is endangered. His poetry is therefore as capable of enjoying the natural world as of chronicling the threats its denizens face...

-- excerpted from "Dark Wings of the Night: First Warm Day – H. Gene Murtha’s Bird Haiku" by Jo McInerney

Saturday, July 1, 2023

A Room of My Own: That's It

Canada Day
through wildfire smoke
the squawk of gulls

fireworks over ...
the distance between stars
and our silence 


FYI: CNBC, Climate, June 30Four North American cities now near worst air quality in the world

Key Points:

1 New York; Washington, D.C.; Montreal; and Toronto have some of the worst air quality in the world, according to an AQI tracking service.

2 Canadian wildfires have sent smoky air around much of North America over the last few weeks.

3 The effect of the wildfires has been significantly worsened by climate change, researchers have found.


Added: reading between the lives and writing between the lines, LXX

firework-lit sky
my veteran friend sleeps 
with a gun


Addedreading between the lives and writing between the lines, LXXI

our football team
lines up for O' Canada
in the center
a Black player looks up
at the sky, endless blue


Added: This Brave New World, XCII

a rowdy white man
held face down on the airport floor
by policemen
he screams, you’re treating me
like a fucking black person

Saturday, April 22, 2023

Special Feature: Haiku and Tanka Selected for Earth Day

My Dear Readers/Friends:

Spring has been with us for a month already, but the weather is becoming more and more uncertain.

spring snowstorm
a black hole
in my universe

Chen-ou Liu

FYI: CBC News, April 19Spring snowstorm — yes, another one — rolls into southern Manitoba


When we celebrate this annual worldwide event, the most important thing that we should keep in mind is:   

The Earth is what we all have in common. -- Wendell Berry

Our planet (the only liveable one; yes, there two other "potentially habitable Earth-size planets" found in the recent past) and our communities (especially the marginalized ones, such as the indigenous peoples) are confronting the impacts of climate change and the connected crisis of species and ecosystem collapse.

stratus clouds grow darker …
loaded with timber, livestock 
and soybeans
truck after truck barrelling 
through the Amazon region

Chen-ou Liu


This Earth Day, we should not only celebrate the environmental diversity of Earth, and also highlight the actions we can take to address environmental problems.

gone from the forest
the flower I knew
only by touch

Padma Rajeswari

Earth Day
the world in a grain
of polymer

LeRoy Gorman

black oil slick
washed up on the beach -- 
looking
in the dead dolphin’s eye
I see a part of myself

Lavana Kray

recycling centre
where to put the dreams
of yesterday

Sebastian Salie 


To conclude today's Special Feature post, I would like to share my tanka with you to lift our spirits:

Earth Day FunPlay ...
a flock of doves bursting
into flight
as a beagle chases my son
rolling on a carpet of green


Happy Earth Day

Chen-ou

Friday, April 21, 2023

Butterfly Dream: Village Stream Haiku by Isabella Mori

English Original

what’s left
of the village stream  ...
a barbie doll

Not So Pretty Haiku, 2022

Isabella Mori


Chinese Translation (Traditional)

村莊的小溪 
如今還剩下什麼呢 ...
一個芭比娃娃

Chinese Translation (Simplified) 

村庄的小溪 
如今还剩下什么呢 ...
一个芭比娃娃


Bio Sketch

Isabella Mori lives on Coast Salish Lands (aka Vancouver, Canada) and has authored three books of and about poetry, including A bagful of haiku – 87 imperfections. Isabella’s work has appeared in publications such as the anthology, The Group Of Seven Reimagined, and is the founder of Muriel’s Journey Poetry Prize

Tuesday, March 28, 2023

One Man's Maple Moon: Wall of Smoke Tanka by Paul Williamson

English Original

pink glows
along the grey wall
of smoke
unconquered flames
claim the forest ridge

Paul Williamson


Chinese Translation (Traditional)

粉紅色的光芒
沿著灰色煙霧
的巨牆
尚未熄滅的火焰
攻佔大片的森林山脊

Chinese Translation (Simplified)

粉红色的光芒
沿着灰色烟雾
的巨墙
尚未熄灭的火焰
攻占大片的森林山脊


Bio Sketch

Paul Williamson is an Australian poet who has published poems on eclectic topics in magazines including Neverending StoryEucalypt, Tanka Music AnthologyRagged EdgesPoems to Wear, Poetry Bridges, Atlas Poetica, Gusts, Skylark, RibbonsQuadrant and Cordite.  He writes poems to clarify feelings and impressions, and record them. He has five collections: The DNA Bookshelf, Moments from Red HillTo the Spice IslandsEdge of Southern Bright and Ties to Red Hill  in 2018.

Monday, December 19, 2022

A Room of My Own: More And More Talks

No More Fairy Tales, VII
written on the last day of COP15, 15th meeting of the Conference of the Parties to the UN Convention on Biological Diversity

as the night deepens 
my wife watches this climate news
with a frown ...
on the floor our son crawls
in circles, forward and backward

these blah-blah-blahs
about how much the world's oceans
will be protected ...
young reps walk out of the talk
in the rain mixed with snow

FYI: The Canadian Press, Dec. 14: "Issue of fairness:" Developing countries walk out of biodiversity talks over funding

Most of the world's biodiversity is located in the poorer countries of the global south. Most of the wealth — much of which was created at the expense of the world's biodiversity — exists in the north.

"It's everyone's problem, but we are not equally responsible for the drivers that have led to the destruction of biodiversity," said the delegate. "This is an issue of fairness."


And

For far too long humanity has paved over, fragmented, over-extracted and destroyed the natural world on which we all depend... Now is our chance to shore up and strengthen the web of life, so it can carry the full weight of generations to come.

-- UN executive director, Inger Andersen


Added: written on the first day of Hanukkah

gathering dark
a 12-meter high menorah 
lit in Maidan Square

FYI: CBC News, Dec. 18: Ukraine's Jewish community is waging a "war between darkness and light" during Hanukkah, rabbi says


Added:

another wave
of widespread missile attacks ...
through the bunker's hole
she gazes at the giant menorah 
in Kyiv's Maidan Square

Sunday, November 6, 2022

Special Feature: Poems Selected to Challenge these "Talks" at COP 27

My Dear Friends:

Delivering for people and the planet (Really!?)

From 6 to 18 November, Heads of State, ministers, and negotiators, along with climate activists, mayors, civil society representatives and CEOs are meeting in the Egyptian coastal city of Sharm el-Sheikh for the largest annual gathering on climate action.

The 27th Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change – COP27 – "builds on the outcomes of COP26 to deliver action on an array of issues critical to tackling the climate emergency" – from urgently reducing greenhouse gas emissions, building resilience, and adapting to the inevitable impacts of climate change, to delivering on the commitments to finance climate action in developing countries... excerpted from United Nation, Climate "Action:" COP27


Below is my poem about COP26 and its "outcomes:"

America is back, our president was here

The President's gas-guzzling 20-car motorcade wound through the streets of Glasgow for the summit. When the motorcade arrived under the media spotlight, a giant WWII-style Climate Siren blasted in the morning chill, opposite the grandiose entrance.

The president opened his speech by launching an attack against the Chinese leader for not attending the summit. One day later, the Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson hit back with a video clip; in it, the President's aide had to wake him up several times as he dozed off at the conference. Eventually, the two biggest polluters called a truce by agreeing to hold a bilateral talk annually, which will start next year. The agreement was reached one day before the end of the summit.

Five days after signing the climate action pledge, the earth-shaking news --"US auctions off the largest oil and gas drilling leases in its history" -- hit the headlines across the globe this cold, windy morning. 

caw-caw-caw of crows
on the White House roof ...
climate talk briefing

Failed Haiku, 7:75, March 2022

FYI: Al Jazeera, Nov. 9, 2021: Climate activists decry ‘false solutions, fairy tales’ at COP26: While corporations promote carbon trading, critics say it is just a scheme to keep profiting from burning dirty energy sources.

(For my poetic responses to COP26, see my "Special Feature" post, "Haiku and Tanka Selected for the COP26 Summit)


Pissed off by these empty talks at the COP26, I decided to start a new, one-year writing project, titled No More Fairy Tales, to challenge these "talks and solutions" presented at the COP27.


Here are first three entries:

No More Fairy Tales, I

raven shadow
after raven shadow ...
COP27

FYI: The Wall Street Journal: Nov.6 : "COP27 Summit Begins as Economy, Ukraine War ...Overshadow Climate Concerns:" Progress has stalled since last year’s U.N. gathering...

The latest news released one hour ago: The Guardian, Nov.6 : "Cop27 gets off to delayed start after tussle over agenda for talks:" Contentious opening to UN climate conference as delegates struggle to reach agreement on discussion of loss and damage.

Reuters, Nov. 7: "At COP27, climate change framed as battle for survival"

"Humanity has a choice: cooperate or perish,” U.N. Secretary General Antonio Guterres told delegates, urging them to accelerate the transition from fossil fuels and speed funding to poorer countries struggling under climate impacts that have already occurred.

And ABC News In-Depth, Nov. 3: Climate Change Activist Greta Thunberg says UN Climate Change Conference is a "scam"

(The following senryu was inspired by Greta Thunberg's response to the "outcomes/solutions" of COP26

climate change debate
I swear I'll go net zero
on swearing

tsuri-dōrō ,10 , July/August 2022)


No More Fairy Tales, II

                                                                                               smoke                    
                                      rising                                                  
                     c r o w s               and                                of 
              of                                         falling 
   murder                                                            plumes 
a


No More Fairy Tales, III
written to this "ridiculously photogenic" Talker, Justin Trudeau, Prime Minister of Canada, the fourth most polluting country per capita in 2022, a country of gas-guzzling car enthusiasts.

COP 1, 2, 3 ...
these endless climate talks 
like crows' caw-caw-caw --
between Canada's plan and action
this Nunavut-sized gap

FYI: Top 5 most polluting countries per capita in 2022: Qatar, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Canada, and the United States of America. And Latest Canada’s Changing Climate Report, 2019

Canada is warming on average at a rate twice as fast as the rest of the world, a new scientific report indicates...Canada's Arctic has seen the deepest impact and will continue to warm at more than double the global rate.

And The Tyee, May 23, 2019: Canada’s Cars Are World’s Worst Gas Guzzlers

A recent report by the International Energy Agency shows that Canada’s vehicles have the highest average fuel consumption and carbon dioxide emissions per kilometre driven. They are also the largest and the second heaviest in the world...

And CBC News, Nov. 14: Canada gets low marks for its efforts to tackle climate change in the new Climate Change Performance Index presented at COP27, scoring 58th out of 63 countries evaluated.

But the federal government says they’re starting to make changes to improve the country’s standing.

And CBC News, Nov. 16: The Arctic community, Tuktoyaktuk, Northwest Territories, Canada, falling into the ocean 

The Arctic hamlet of Tuktoyaktuk, N.W.T., is collapsing into the ocean as it loses up to a metre of coastline each year. The people who live there are in a race against time to preserve their way of life — and their community — before it is washed away.

Powerful storm waves and thawing permafrost causing erosion are collapsing Tuk’s coastline by about one metre each year.

The hamlet of about 1,000 people, mostly Inuvialuit, are in a race against time to preserve their way of life — and their community — before it is washed away.

In about 50 years time, “the health care centre, the college and even half of the cemetery will be gone,” said Whalen, unless there’s physical intervention.


No More Fairy Tales, IV
written in response to [the "most powerful] Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin"'s critique of President Joe Biden's "end-of-coal remark" [not a plan]:

this cold night
a total lunar eclipse ... 
toward the lamppost
the coal lobbyist's shadow
passing over a street teen

FYI: Insider, Nov. 7: "Biden says coal plants will be replaced by cheaper solar and wind power."

These comments drew criticism not only from Republicans, but from [the "most powerful] Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin" of West Virginia [49th place for average family income and 46th for percentage of families in poverty]. The senator, whose state still generates roughly 90% of its electricity from coal, called the president's comments "outrageous and divorced from reality." 

"President Biden's comments are not only outrageous and divorced from reality, they ignore the severe economic pain the American people are feeling because of rising energy costs" 

Divorced from reality, Indeed! This is America, the second most polluting country in the world.

The former head of the Environmental Protection Agency was Andrew R. Wheeler, the most influential coal lobbyist (For more, see Public Citizen, July 12, 2018:The Coal Lobbyist Now Running the Environmental Protection Agency)


No More Fairy Tales, V

in the twilight chill
a sperm whale motionless
on the rocky shore
inside its stomach a knee-high
mound of fishing nets

FY: According to the Marine Animal Response Society's executive director, Tonya Wimmer, it is easy for sperm whales to ingest trash because “they use their mouths like a vacuum” while feeding. And thecloser inspection shows it died a slow, painful death caused by eating “garbage.” For more, see Miami Herald, Nov. 21: "Upsetting" discovery made in belly of whale on Nova Scotia beach, researchers say.


No More Fairy Tales, VI
for Greta Thunberg

tongues of forest fires 
there's no Plan[et] B, the rest
blah, blah, blah ...

FYI: The New Yorker, Nov.21, 2022: Climate Change from A to Z

It was thirty years ago that the world’s “so-called leaders” gathered in Rio de Janeiro for the so-called Earth Summit. Everyone agreed that radical change was needed. To avert disaster, global CO2 emissions, which were then running at around twenty-two billion metric tons a year, would have to be reduced, eventually almost to zero...A follow-up conference of the parties, or cop, took place in Kyoto in 1997. By then, annual global emissions had risen to twenty-four billion tons....By 2015, emissions had increased to thirty-five billion tons a year. At that year’s cop—No. 21—held in Paris, it was decided that, at last, really and truly, it was time to get serious...

this year’s, in Sharm el-Sheikh, just concluded—and to speak loftily about “net zero” and “a low-carbon economy.” But nothing will change, and, as a result, everything will change...

                                                                                       To be continued ...

Friday, April 22, 2022

Special Feature: Haiku and Tanka Selected for Earth Day

My Dear Readers/Friends:

Earth Day is a worldwide event that occurs annually on April 22. It "celebrates the environmental diversity of Earth and highlights the actions we can take to address environmental problems."


The Earth is what we all have in common.

-- Wendell Berry

the globe balanced
on the back of a turtle
Earth Day

Selected Haiku, 2017 Yamadera Basho Memorial Museum English Haiku Contest
                                                                          
Chen-ou Liu

FYI:This haiku alludes to the mythological idea of a World Turtle that supports the earth on its back.


I would like to share with you the following environmentally conscious haiku and tanka to improve our  awareness about environmental problems, spark new reflections on these five issues that Earth Day focuses on to preserve the environment: climate change, pollution, deforestation, water scarcity, and loss of biodiversity.

this world of reduction: 
of fingers lost to frostbite
of lives lost to depression ...
in the morning sunshine
another polar bear drifts off

PoemHunter, March 23 2022 

Chen-ou Liu

black oil slick
washed up on the beach -- 
looking
in the dead dolphin’s eye
I see a part of myself

Atlas Poetica, 33,July 2018

Lavana Kray

where forest was
the old map is thick
with dust

tinywords, January 10, 2014

LeRoy Gorman

dry season --
we haul echoes
from the well

Commendation, 2014 Klostar Ivanic International Haiku Contest

Carl Seguiban

I race the light 
into a Kansas sunset 
of corn and sky 
at the horizon 
I find only darkness

Modern English Tanka, 1:2, Winter 2006 

David Bacharach

One important question is left to each of us to answer: is Earth Day just another day of being an indifferent consumer? 

a giant slab of ice
shears off from Antarctica ...
in his SUV
the air becomes stuffier
after my Green New Deal talk

Chen-ou Liu

FYI: State of the Planet (the news site of the Columbia Climate School), December 16, 2020: How Buying Stuff Drives Climate Change

In fact, our consumer habits are actually driving climate change. A 2015 study found that the production and use of household goods and services was responsible for 60 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions. Not surprisingly, wealthy countries have the most per capita impact. A new U.N. report found that the richest one percent of the global population emit more than twice the amount than the poorest 50 percent; moreover, the wealthier people become, the more energy they use. A typical American’s yearly carbon emissions are five times that of the world’s average person. In 2009, U.S. consumers with more than $100,000 in yearly household income made up 22.3 percent of the population, yet produced almost one-third of all U.S. households’ total carbon emissions.


I would like to conclude today's Special Feature: Earth Day post on a positive note:

Away, away, from men and towns,
To the wild wood and the downs —
To the silent wilderness,
Where the soul need not repress its music.

-- Percy Bysshe Shelley

forest stillness
a flickering
bird-song

Asahi Haikuist Network, September 20, 2013

Marshall Hryciuk

hiking alone
on this wooded trail
in dappled sunlight
I am lost but for
the hermit thrush's song
(written for Percy Bysshe Shelley)

Chen-ou Liu 

Friday, November 12, 2021

A Room of My Own: The End (of COP26)

This Brave New World, XXIX

written in response to The Hill's Nov. 10 News : Nancy Pelosi defends "America's moral authority" on climate action and The Washington Post's Nov. 11 News: U.S. and China issue joint pledge to slow climate change


   Ame      rica 
i    s    a    l    l    i    n
with arms linked
young activists chanting
blahblahblah, clean up your mess

a pundit ranting
beneath slate-grey skies
during this decade
there will be talk after talk
between the US and China

FYI: Biden administration holds largest oil and gas sale in US history, The Boston Globe, Nov 17 And Biden Administration to Hold Massive Auction for Oil and Gas Leases in Gulf of Mexico, Democracy Now, Nov. 18

Climate activists have condemned the Biden administration for proceeding with an auction of over 80 million acres in the Gulf of Mexico for oil and gas extraction. It’s the largest-ever sale of drilling leases in the Gulf, and comes just days after the U.N. global climate summit wrapped. An attorney at the Center for Biological Diversity said “It’s hard to imagine a more hypocritical and dangerous thing for the administration to do. It’s incredibly reckless and we think unlawful too.”


Added: This Brave New World, XXX

opposite 
the summit entrance
a giant WWII-style
blood-red Climate Siren
blasting in the morning chill

FYI: Cop26 deal falters as China calls on countries to decide their own emissions cuts, The Telegraph, Nov. 14

The historic climate deal secured at Cop26 was thrown into “real jeopardy” by a last-minute deal between India and China to object to calls to phase-out coal power and fossil fuel subsidies, Alok Sharma said on Sunday...

Lessons from COP26 for a Just and Effective Transition:We need fast action, and realistic plans that put communities first, The Tyee, Nov. 15

In a powerful speech, Barbados Prime Minister Mia Mottley reminded the world that since the economic downturn in 2008, the wealthiest nations have spent $25 trillion on economic recovery, of which $9 trillion was spent during the pandemic. While that amount could have been used to keep the planet within 1.5 C global temperature rise, much of it was spent on COVID economic recovery for the fossil fuel industry. 

Sunday, November 7, 2021

A Room of My Own: Business as Usual Tanka

This Brave New World, XXVII
written in response to BBC's COP26 News, Nov.,6: Thousands march for Glasgow's biggest protest

one week past
business as usual
blahblahblah ...
a motorcade of SUVs winding
toward the climate summit

Note: For more of poems for climate change, see Special Feature: Haiku and Tanka Selected for the COP26 Summit.

Thursday, November 4, 2021

Special Feature: Haiku and Tanka Selected for the COP26 Summit

                                                                                         a bomb cyclone
                                                                                         lashing the seashore with winds
                                                                                         rain and high-walled surf ...
                                                                                         after the fight a chasm
                                                                                         between her life and my dream
                                                                                          
FYI: A bomb cyclone is a rapidly strengthening storm with central pressure that plummets by 24 millibars or more within 24 hours. The lower the pressure, the more powerful the storm.

The environmental is personal and the personal is behavioral. -- Chen-ou Liu


My Dear Readers:

The COP26 summit in Glasgow opened last Sunday, kicking off two weeks of intense diplomatic negotiations by almost 200 countries on how to tackle the common challenge of global warming.

I would like to share with you the following environmentally conscious haiku and tanka to improve  our  awareness about environmental problems, spark new reflections, and add a new layer of complexity to pondering difficult questions raised in the  Summit. 

Selected Haiku and Tanka:

permafrost
a polar bear’s paws
sink deeper

Debbie Strange

winter sunshine ...
a polar bear
                   d r i f t i n g  o f f

Chen-ou Liu

FYI: The Arctic has warmed three times more quickly than the planet as a whole, and faster than previously thought, a report warned... The alarming finding comes from the Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Programme (AMAP) in a report timed to coincide with a ministerial meeting this week of the Arctic Council in Reykjavik, which gathers countries bordering the region.... Phys.org, May 20, 2021

the cameras
of a privileged few
focus
on the polar bears
stepping towards extinction

Keitha Keyes

each of them
wants a part of me
I am Antarctica
belonging to no one
yet bearing many flags

Kat Lehmann

black oil slick
washed up on the beach -- 
looking
in the dead dolphin’s eye
I see a part of myself

Lavana Kray

a new rock,
plastiglomerate
litters the shore --
will the words I leave behind
also survive the seas?
(plastiglomerate: melted plastic trash mixed with beach sediment and debris)

Janet Lynn Davis

dry season --
we haul echoes
from the well

Carl Seguiban

bare hills
the horizon looped
between post and wire

Jo McInerney

I follow the trickle
of this childhood creek
Earth Day

Chen-ou Liu

To conclude today's Special Feature post, I would like to share with you the following reflective tanka about a sense of oneness with nature:

I rest my paddle
let the canoe drift awhile
rocks     trees     sky
the lake and I
are an empty mirror

Irene Golas 

Happy Reading

Chen-ou

FYI: Tech Won’t Save Us. Shrinking Consumption Will, Andrew Nikiforuk, The Tyee, Nov. 3

Since 1995 there have been 25 global conferences on climate change. At every one our so-called political leaders have kicked the can down the road and sung from a bright green hymnbook...