“I always think that the best way to know God is to love many things.” ~ Vincent van Gogh
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Sunday, February 2, 2025

Mountain (NaHaiWriMo 2025: Day 2)

 

childhood

ringed by mountains —

flatlands terrify





















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‘from whence

cometh my strength?’ —

the mountains 




















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my dad’s painting 

Mount Roland blue and craggy —

our favourite




















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in Peru

mountains are deities —

I lift up mine eyes



















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‘cloud catcher’

our local mountain 

caught me too




















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four years

under The Pinnacle —

guardian 
























All photos mine.


My response to the latest NaHaiWriMo prompt.  Later: NaHaiWriMo was back in February, but I'm sharing this (in June) with Poets and Storytellers United, for Friday Writings #180: Stubborn About the Small Things.


Mountains are not small, LOL, but haiku are! Anyway, I'm stubborn in my love for mountains and my dislike of flat country. A friend who was brought up on the plains always loved flat country dearly; others have told me they feel 'hemmed in' when surrounded by mountains. But I grew up that way, and experience it as an opening up to the vastness above, and a reassurance of safety. I'm ecstatic to be living surrounded by mountains again in my old age.

(I'm also stubborn in the belief that 5-7-5 syllables is the least important rule of haiku – and in fact, for English-language haiku, is not a rule at all.)







25 comments:

  1. Rosemary, I like your Haiku mountain collection and it's finding personal value is each 17 syllables. In El Paso, Texas, we lived below a mountain, I forgot its name. Really nice, I climbed up and rode a cable car back down.
    p.s. New Mexico was on the other side of the mountain.
    and I'll show it when appropriate, perhaps later today,
    maybe not.
    Jim

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    1. Yes, nice to live near mountains; also nice to go to the top of them (when young enough).

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  2. It is wonderful to see the mountains both in picture and in words..perhaps a solid base of memories and a reminder to always look up and out - Jae

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    1. I think that becomes instinctive and natural for those of us who grow up in such surroundings.

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  3. A beautiful ode to the mountains. I grew up in the flat Netherlands but couldn't live there anymore. i came to love the mountains as well which are a beautiful backdrop of Christchurch

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    1. I'm glad you have come to love the mountains too – particularly as you now live among them!

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  4. Being from the mountains too, I enjoyed these small poems about big things.

    Pris cilla King

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  5. I love the haiku tribute to mountains. We have rolling ones here.

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    1. Oh, I like the sound of that! I'll have to look yours up online.

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  6. I enjoyed these little gems about mountains, the fortresses surrounding your heart and mine here in British Columbia.

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    1. It seems that many in our poetic community share the love of mountains. Nice to know!

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  7. Great pictures.
    All that means a lot is a big thing & not small at all! :)

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  8. First, I agree with you that the 5-7-5 syllables rule for English haiku should not be a rule at all. But it must be strictly adhere to in the Japanese language.

    I love all the takes on the mountains. It's lovely. And you have been to Machu Picchu. I can only dream about it. Maybe one day. And the Plains of Nazca too. :)

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    1. I never got to the Plains of Nazca. But I got to a lot other places, so I shan't complain. Machu Picchu was very, very special. I loved what other bits of Peru I experienced, too.

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  9. A nice ode to the mountains, I too love e mountains. It's an experience in itself

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    Replies
    1. Its so nice to discover, by sharing this, how many others also love mountains.

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  10. Wonderful! Give me mountains any day, forget the beach!

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    Replies
    1. Well, I grew up on a mountainous island, so I love both, and fortunately have both here as well – not an island, but close to the coast.

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  11. Wonderful set of haiku and lovely mountain photos!

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  12. Great photos accompanied by inspiring haiku

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