far from failed_haiku

It has been a couple of months since the one of a kind haikai journal shut its doors. I have noticed it to be the fate of several journals these days, and wonder if it has to do with editor-burnout. One does get exhausted with taking care of life while at the same time running…

Touchstone nomination 2025…

To be chosen among so many is always an honor. Hence any publication is an award in itself. Haiku Girl Summer is a Journal with issues only in summer. I have been privileged to be published five times in this year's issues. Many thanks to the editors of this summer for selecting my haiku: Katherine…

of sangīt and such…

I have always wondered about the idea of naming someone at birth. How did my name come to be associated so much with music? Did they know that I would react to music like that? Did they know that the only place I could dare sing is the bathroom?   In any case in this month's…

Warrior

This month has been an especially turbulent one for me. As I pondered the whys and wherefores of war, I noticed that there were fewer mentions of the women in war as compared to men. Operation Sindhoor, (such a Bollywood name for a serious endeavor) was made out to be how men avenged killings by…

On a little cloud numbered nine.

It has been very long since I sent in a submission. But failed haiku had a new submissions calendar, and I was running around a bit less stressed. So here are some senryu that made it into the journal. Check out the other poems in this lovely journal here: failed haiku For a wee memory of…

…and everything in between…

Composing poems is a lonely path. So when I found the Evergreen Haiku group where a few poets came together to discuss haiku, I was elated! It was excellently facilitated by Michele Root-Bernstein. I was a member of the group for a very short time but I loved every moment of it. When the doors…

Curating

While I sit at my desk watching the midwest winter creep in slowly, I realize that I have not yet got my head wrapped around all that it meant for me to be a curator for Drifting Sands Haibun, Issue 29.   It was certainly a learning experience. And answered the question: What do people…

From the world of a haijin

It will soon be three years since I discovered the world of haiku. No, not the 5-7-5 form that we were taught in school because it was easier to teach syllables using this idea.  It was in a workshop by John Stevenson during the inauguration of Triveni Haikai India, where the realization of the relation…

A nod to spring

Am stoked to share my debut in LEAF!  (At the link here)   This issue is gorgeous, and I swallowed it up in one gulp. Beautiful work by so many haikuists of the world, I am honored to be standing among them. I hope you read, comment and most of all, enjoy some beautiful haiku/senryu. …