Shadow Pond Journal Issue V

 


Ukiyo-e Woodblock print by Kitao Shigemasa, circa 1772 - 1776, entitled Third Lunar Month, Blossom Viewing at Asuka Hill
👁 : Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division 




Editor’s Note – Issue V: Love


Welcome to the fifth issue of The Shadow Pond Journal—our second anniversary edition. Two years ago, this journal began as a quiet space to reflect the depths and nuances of the haiku moment. With each issue, we’ve explored what it means to be human in relationship with the world. This time, we turn our attention to one of the most enduring, complex, and quietly revolutionary themes: love.

Love, in its many forms—devotional, fractured, fleeting, enduring—can be both a whisper and a storm. In curating this issue, I found myself drawn to haiku that offered more than sentimentality. These 82 poems were chosen not only for their craft, but for the unexpected angles they took—reminders that love is rarely neat, often ambiguous, and always personal.

As a special treat to mark our two-year milestone, I had the pleasure of speaking with esteemed poet and psychologist Bruce Feingold, whose insights into haiku, humanity, and heartfulness add a rich dimension to this issue. His words, like the poems, remind us that haiku is a form of love in itself—a patient, attentive way of seeing.

You may notice that this issue contains fewer poems than usual. This was a deliberate choice. Love is a subject that invites repetition, and I wanted to preserve the clarity and distinctiveness of each voice. Sometimes, restraint is its own kind of devotion.

Thank you to all the poets who submitted their work and to our readers who return again and again to these quiet waters. Here's to another year of depth, discovery, and yes—love.


Warmly,
Katherine Winnick
Editor, The Shadow Pond Journal




The Poems



tapas plates...

I slipped into a place of nirvana

secured forever


Snigdha Agrawal, India 

honeymoon
my ivory dress sinks
to the floor

Jessica Allyson, Canada 

Qutub Minar

pigeons in love

with the sky


Rupa Anand, India 


my final answer Venus at dusk

Cynthia Anderson, USA 


moonrise
the first touch
of your skin

Joanna Ashwell, UK 

lotus mouth 
ritual devotion even 
when let down

Jerome Berglund, USA 

sake -
melts on our tongues
no transcripts available

Laila Brahmbhatt, India 

snow patches
all suspension points
in your letter

Mirela Brailean, Romania 

evening coolness —
a fly woos me
without mercy

Maurizio Brancaleoni, Italy 

unable to close
their petals in sunlight
bee lovers

Dr Randy Brooks, USA 


lingering clouds
the shadow of your mouth
over mine

Stefanie Bucifal, Germany 


half-moon night     chiaroscuro of my dreams 

Lakshman Bulusu, USA 


ge(ode) to a star

Susan Burch 


elderberry blooms
caught in a moment 
of surrender

Sarah Mahina Calvello 


forget-me-nots
a parting message 
upon her grave

Paul Callus, Malta

love letter
no signature
no return address 

 John Paul Caponigro


I look for the sun
but find the moon
instead

Patricia Carragon, USA 

autumn leaves  

your silence between my words  


Christina Chin, Malaysia 

regurgitating
everything he says
love birds

Jackie Chou, USA 



thunderhead
so sweet we could eat
that purple sky

Sara Clancy, USA 

after the end
the beginning
blue iris

Alvin B Cruz, Philippines 

metro kiss
the little plaster
over my past

Dr Timothy Daly, France 

the weight
of a moment...
so much left unsaid

Melissa Dennison, UK 


past love
hydrangea flowers wither
but don't fall

Marie Derley, Belgium 

dancing butterflies
her breath
across my skin

C Jean Downer, Canada 

steamy shower
I leave love notes
on the mirror

Baisali Chatterjee Dutt, India 


the dawn of protest
a deep prolonged kiss
of hope

Bruce Feingold, USA 

white garden
the scent of jasmine
her whisper

Lucas Pesso Feniman, Brazil 

in the sky
three words appear
and my world stands still

Katja Fox, UK 



sunday a coffee for two

Barbara Anna Gaiardoni, Italy 


dating app—
the last shafts of light
in a clouded sky

Goran Gatalica, Croatia 

red tulips
my love for him
one-sided …

Jahnavi Gogoi, Canada 


succumbing to a Venus flytrap once more

Alvaro Carrasquel Gomez, Venezuela 


returning home
I study my wife’s patience
through a crack

Andrew Grossman, USA 

the separation—
cherry petals fall
between our dreams 

Dorna Hainds 

sugar hearts
your sweet messages
melting on my tongue

Ruth Holzer, USA 

deeper water
a mermaid shows me
her colors

Lee Hudspeth, USA 

moon-tugged tides
the familial bond

Marilyn Humbert, Australia 

clumsy feet
bride's unrehearsed dance
with grandpa

Roberta Beach Jacobson, USA 

departing train
he embraces her
with his eyes

Govind Joshi, India

cut a caper . . .

mellow in mulmul 

red vermilion summer 


Monica Kakkar, India/USA 


church steps
how long before I knew
she hadn't come?

Emil Karla, France 

your rules
will I win
you over

Ravi Kiran, Hyderabad


inflamed trees
strip bare
to seduce summer

MK Kuol, South Sudan 

trembling of a lilac
in gentle rain
first kiss

Douglas J Lanzo, USA 

emotional support
the song I hear
in his bark        

Barrie Levine, USA 

cannabalism -

in love

two praying mantises


Mile Lisica, Bosnia and Herzegovina 



as if my late wife's hand
caressed my wrinkled face ...
blossom rain


Chen-ou Liu, Canada 


cold breath-
only in our hearts
is there warmth

Brigita Lukina, Croatia 


longing of the heart-
fog covers a mysterious
expanse


Glorija Lukina, Croatia 

kintsugi garden
life always offers
a second chance

Krzysztof (Mxchx) Macha, Poland 



violet bloom
the lingering color
of her voice

Richard Matta, USA 


with you    the timelessness of one heart beat

Rita Melissano, USA 


buttercups –
two young lovers
hand in hand

Daniela Misso, Italy 

threads of smoke
in the space between us
silent fire

Rashmi Mohapatra, India 

caressed
by a peacock feather . . .
my breasts bloom

Veronika Zora Novak, Canada 


weeping into
the river
rusting padlocks

Gareth Nurden, Wales 


summer snow still reading
both          of           our
          predictions

Vishal Prabhu, India 


coca leaves
the shaman unfurls
into the cupid

Ganesh R, India 


spraying mist
on a dozen red roses
powder rain

Geethanjali Rajan, India


suspension bridge

he loves me

                               he loves me not


Miera Rao, USA 

the side path
to the stream
our kiss

Bryan Rickert, USA 

how the bee
knows the bee balm
meeting in life after life

Kelly Sargent, USA 

love me
love (me) knot
that unbreakable bond(age)

Bonnie J Scherer, Alaska

storm clouds
we haven't spoken in hours
our living trust

Ronald Scully, USA

on her breakfast tray
a garden-gathered bouquet
just because

Jenny Shepherd, UK 

rain delay—
we speak only
in parentheses

Nalini Shetty, India 

early thaw
my wedding ring
slips a little

Neena Singh, India 

the most enchanting
of galaxies
her freckled face

Tomislav Sjekloća, Montenegro 

morning glory
the fingers of the sun
caressing her breasts

Joshua St Claire, USA 


golden anniversary the moonflower’s heart-shaped leaves

Debbie Strange, Canada 


gatekeeper butterfly
on a soldier's wound
rising barley moon

Alan Summers, UK 

moonlight profile
a side of her
only I see

Leon Tefft, USA 

after the quarrel
her  lingering kiss gentle 
on my forehead 

Anne Marie Tvpm, India 


twilight in Santorini -
the mix piper shades
of our relationship

Steliana Cristina Voicu, Romania 

hazy moon
the voices of tree frogs
searching for mates

Joseph P. Wechselberger, USA

oriental sky lantern
I write your name
on a rising moon   

Richard West, USA 

umami—
learning to love
myself

Tony Williams, Scotland 

proposal 
the white clover he ties
on her finger

Kathabela Wilson, USA 


snowflakes melt slow kisses in the open mouth of the sea

Robert Witmer, Japan 


crescent light
tracing the shape
of your absence

Nitu Yumnam, UAE 

what colour the heart
dividing brothers
by skin colour

Mariam Roshan Zachariah




The Poets

Snigdha Agrawal, India
Jessica Allyson, Canada 
Rupa Anand, India 
Cynthia Anderson, USA 
Joanna Ashwell, UK 
Jerome Berglund, USA 
Laila Brahmbhatt, India 
Mirela Brailean, Romania 
Maurizio Brancaleoni, Italy 
Dr Randy Brooks, USA 
Stefanie Bucifal, Germany 
Lakshman Bulusu, USA 
Susan Burch 
Sarah Mahina Calvello 
Paul Callus, Malta 
John Paul Caponigro 
Patricia Carragon, USA 
Christina Chin, Malaysia 
Jackie Chou, USA 
Sara Clancy, USA 
Alvin B Cruz, Philippines 
Dr Timothy Daly, France 
Melissa Dennison, UK 
Marie Derley, Belgium 
C Jean Downer, Canada 
Baisali Chatterjee Dutt, India 
Bruce Feingold, USA 
Lucas Pesso Feniman, Brazil 
Katja Fox, UK 
Barbara Anna Gaiardoni, Italy 
Goran Gatalica, Croatia 
Jahnavi Gogoi, Canada 
Alvaro Carrasquel Gomez, Venezuela 
Andrew Grossman, USA 
Dorna Hainds 
Ruth Holzer, USA 
Lee Hudspeth, USA 
Marilyn Humbert, Australia 
Roberta Beach Jacobson, USA
Govind Joshi, India 
Monica Kakkar, India/USA 
Emil Karla, France 
Ravi Kiran, Hyderabad  
MK Kuol, South Sudan 
Douglas J Lanzo, USA 
Barrie Levine, USA 
Mile Lisica, Bosnia and Herzegovina 
Chen-ou Liu, Canada 
Brigita Lukina, Croatia 
Glorija Lukina, Croatia 
Krzysztof (Mxchx) Macha, Poland 
Richard Matta, USA 
Rita Melissano, USA 
Daniela Misso, Italy 
Rashmi Mohapatra, India 
Veronika Zora Novak, Canada 
Gareth Nurden, Wales 
Vishal Prabhu, India 
Ganesh R, India 
Geethanjali Rajan, India 
Miera Rao, USA
Bryan Rickert, USA 
Kelly Sargent, USA 
Bonnie J. Scherer, Alaska 
Ronald Scully, USA 
Jenny Shepherd, UK 
Nalini Shetty, India 
Neena Singh, India 
Tomislav Sjekloća, Montenegro 
Joshua St Claire, USA 
Debbie Strange, Canada 
Alan Summers, UK 
Leon Tefft, USA 
Anne Marie Tvpm, India 
Steliana Cristina Voicu, Romania 
Joseph P. Wechselberger, USA
Richard West, USA 
Tony Williams, Scotland 
Kathabela Wilson, USA 
Robert Witmer, Japan 
Nitu Yumnam, UAE 
Mariam Roshan Zachariah


INTERVIEW WITH BRUCE FEINGOLD

Touchstone Awards Committee 
The Haiku Foundation USA 





👁 : Bruce Feingold 
Courtesy of The Haiku Foundation USA 




How did you come to learn about haiku?

I was an English major in college, but had never been formally introduced to haiku. Before I started writing haiku I published free verse.    Then, for my fortieth birthday,  a friend gave me Basho’s The Narrow Road to the Deep North, and poetic lightning hit me. I thought, “I can write haiku!”  At this juncture life was full:  I was happily married with two young children and immersed in my career,  but I missed an avenue for creative expression.  With haiku’s emphasis on nature, crystalizing the essence of an emotion, being in the here and now and seeing the heart of things, it was a perfect match for me.  As a bonus, I could write in a quick moment in the course of daily life. 

Looking back, it makes sense that haiku found me and called to me.  At age eleven,  I was camping at Mount Lassen in Northern California and woke up in the middle of the night to a sky lit up by the Milky Way, and for the first time I experienced the act of truly seeing. The stars were not  dimmed by city lights and not dry classroom facts.  The sky was alive,  and I experienced a sense of awe with the natural world which has been a core spiritual
reality my whole life.  From age seventeen onwards I became an avid  backpacker, fisherman, gardener, wildflower man and birdwatcher. I explored meditation, yoga, William Blake and the Beats;   fast forward to my doctoral dissertation in 1979 when I  explored the mental heath and spiritual benefits of wilderness experiences. The stars lined up in amazing synchronicity to discover haiku at an opportune period in my life.

Did you have any mentors?

After reading Basho,  swept up with naive enthusiasm and knowing nothing else about haiku, I submitted  perfect 5/7/5 haiku to Modern Haiku. I had no idea that the editor Robert Spiess, received thousands of submissions each reading period yet he was encouraging and generous with his time.  He took me under his wings and rejected all but one poem which was published in 1991:

traveling alone
vultures float in a pale sky
the half moon glowing

In the days of paper submissions, Robert included a crisp one dollar bill with his acceptances and wrote what will sound familiar to old timers:

“A couple of others were ‘sort of close'. What you tend to do in many of your haiku is to intellectualize. D.T. Suzuiki said ‘A haiku should not express ideas but put forward perceptions reflecting intuitions.’”  I still treasure his handwritten note!

I became a voracious reader of the classical Japanese masters,  early American haiku poets, the renown journals of the era,  and seminal treatise like the Haiku Handbook.  From these readings and from Robert, I learned  haiku fundamentals:  the centrality of images,  brevity, simplicity, resonance and meaning, originality, the sense of now and the moment, juxtaposition, cutting, rhythm and musicality,  kigo and connection with the natural world, the importance of surprise,  and the value of authenticity and writing from the heart.

The San Francisco Bay Area is a hotbed of talented haiku poets so joining the Haiku Poets of Northern California enhanced my feeling of community, and I received invaluable encouragement and support.  I learned the value  and pleasure of listening to poets read their work and engaging in workshops with fellow haikuists. 

Along the haiku path, Stanford F. Forrester and Francine Porad  emboldened me to express heart felt emotion and write about everything and anything.  As an editor of Frogpond  Jim Kacian gave me valuable feedback, published my first collection, A New Moon (2004), and encouraged my service to the haiku community.   Chuck Brickley, Randy Brooks, Renee Owen, and Joseph Robello provided editorial feedback on my collections, and Chuck, Randy, John Stevenson and Paul Miller inspired me to be fresh and contemporary yet honor haiku tradition and to develop a critical eye. 

There are many others whose work I admire ,who have been supportive throughout the years and I have been fortunate enough to have worked together on haiku projects with:  Fay Aoyagi, Susan Antolin,  Brad Bennet, Paul Chambers, Francine Barnwarth,  Hank Dunlap, Robert Epstein, Terri French, Garry Gay, Johnnie Johnson Hafernik,  Deborah Kolodji,  Bev Acuff Momoi, Chad Lee Robinson, Patricia Macmiller,  and BillieWilson , just to name a few!

Poets with fresh voices, like Robin Smith, Julie Bloss Kelsey and Alan Summers, challenge me to be open to haiku invention.  Reading the most avant-garde poets, who are stretching the boundaries of language, expands my creative expression.  Who wants to be a haiku curmudgeon?

Do you have a writing process and where do you feel most inspired to write?

I write everywhere, every moment and nowhere and not at all!  I have rich creative periods, spurred by the highs and lows of life, and fallow periods when I feel I’ll never write anything worthwhile again.  

My writing process relies on being open to experience and  expressing what is happening in me and around me.   Nothing is more satisfying than after an inner, interpersonal, socio-political or natural stimulus,  a haiku miraculously arises from the unconscious: many of my haiku are relatively unchanged from these inspirations. They are spontaneous, joyful, authentic and tap into deeper realities.  Haiku also arise from silence and stillness,  when we listen to inner stirrings. 

Nonetheless, haiku is also a craft. There are poems which I have tried to write for decades and only later pinpoint the right words or the correct form,  which matches the poem. Playing around with order and syntax, editing extraneous words, stretching the boundaries of language, reading a poem out loud for sound and rhythm, getting feedback from other poets, and experimenting with a haiku as a one liner versus a traditional three liner, are all tools of the trade. 

Several other factors stimulate the creative juices: reading the classics and contemporary haiku,  including journals and new collections;  being outdoors whether on a hike or in my treasured garden, traveling far and wide, being aware of the political and social movements of the zeistgeist and being present with family and friends.


Do you have any favourite haiku of yours that you'de like to share?

I’d like to share a range of poems to illustrate some trends in English-speaking haiku.

Here’s a contemporary nature haiku,  which is a  poem I struggled to write for several years after the actual experience:

mudbank
the eye blink
of a bull frog

2023 Golden Triangle Award,  2nd Place

Even in Basho’s era, haiku included a kigo and a specific human element.  In other words, even in the beginning, haiku were never only pure nature, objective poems:

moonless night
my reclusive neighbor 
points out Jupiter

Modern Haiku 41.3 Autumn, 2010
inside the mirror: The Red Moon Anthology of English-Language Haiku 2005, Editors, Jim Kacian and staff (Red Moon Press, 2006)

Originally, senryu was ironic and comical comments about human nature which is also one of my favorite genres:

Egotesticle
Commended [Innovative], The Haiku Foundation HaikuNow! International Haiku Contest (2012)

In 2016 I was activated by the United States election and concurrently had a sudden, dangerous arrhythmia  spurring this spontaneous poem.  I believe this poem illustrates the evolution of English-speaking senryu towards the political and social challenges of our time.  

arrhythmia the unraveling of the republic

Mariposa 37, Autumn- Winter, 2017 
old song: The Red Moon Anthology of English-Language Haiku 2017, Editors, Jim Kacian and staff, 2018.

When did you start teaching haiku?

Over the years I have given numerous readings and interviews   which in themselves are educational.  When I do readings I  share my process and views of contemporary haiku. Even in my first book A New Moon (2004) I wrote an epilogue called, “A Brief Explanation of Haiku for Non-Haiku Readers and Friends.”

On a formal basis I have been a Haiku Society of America mentor for several years to burgeoning  haiku poets, and  the personal connection, and being part of their growth as poets,  has been enjoyable and  rewarding.


What advice would you give to someone new to haiku? 

I’ll  summarize my advice in three parts:  Read  read, read, seek out haiku mentors,  friends and organizations,  and be brave.

I believe it’s crucial to know the history of haiku and being well versed in  haiku writers who came before us and know the ‘rules’ but don’t be afraid to stretch boundaries and develop your unique voice and signature style.     Be bold, let your writing wings fly, and don’t be afraid of to make ‘mistakes’ and write ‘bad' haiku.  I’ve  written more awful haiku than the stars in the heavens.  Finally, for many, haiku becomes a journey of self discovery and a spiritual practice akin to meditation.

I encourage new and old haiku poets to read  classical poets like Basho, Buson,  Chiyo-ni, Shiki, Issa and Santoka and the early American haiku masters like Hackett, Roseliep , Peggy Lyles, Willis, and Dickson,  just to name a few.  

Read the early synopsis of haiku in the seminal haiku books like   Haiku Handbook by William Higgenson and ‘how to guides’  such as  Lee Gurga's A Poets' Guide (there are many newer ones as well).  If you can afford it,  purchase your favorite authors from the  contemporary haiku publishers like Red Moon Press, Brooks Books,  Alba,  Cutltlefish, and Snapshot.

Online resources are plentiful:  The Haiku Foundation (https://thehaikufoundation.org/) offers  haiku activities for the newcomer and veteran alike; the THF librarian offers a book of the week and peruse the Touchstone Awards archives for the honored poems and books over the last decade. 

Frogpond and Modern Haiku are musts for the serious haiku poet, and I would add bottle rockets which has its own unique niche. There are terrific international journals like Presence and the Trevini.  There are many journals which are free online like The Heron's Nest, failed haiku, Prune Juice, tiny words, Whiptail and  your own, Shadow Pond..  

I highly recommend joining HSA and a local chapter or similar organizations across the globe.  Attend  as many haiku conferences as you can and look for zoom readings and presentations so you can hear poets in their own voices.    Finally, HSA offers intimate mentee groups which are supportive, educational and fun.  Finally, as you become involved in haiku, consider volunteering locally or nationally as this may both  enrich your own writing and lend support to your haiku journey.


To become a friend of the Shadow Pond Journal  ; 

Shadow Pond Journal is a free publication as a contribution to the international haiku community and is run voluntarily.

If you would like to contribute please head over to www.ko-fi.com/katherineewinnick



Comments

  1. A beautiful issue, honoured to be included. A great interview with Bruce too, thank you.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Such a beautiful edition! I enjoyed reading it! Thank you for published my poem! 🌹

    ReplyDelete
  3. What an enlightening interview, so nice to learn more about Bruce's history, philosophy and process! :D Katherine is such an incredibly talented and visionary editor, seriously what an issue the elegant design elevates enormously too really went extra mile here, absolutely one of most stunning publications (in form and content) out there, love to see it! Congratulations gifted featured poets!!

    ReplyDelete

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