Sep 29
D. Gale: Haiku 7
Posted: under Guest.
Tags: D. Gale, dating, hope, love, marriageSeptember 29th, 2009
Love?:
Negotiating
with a still-married woman…
Insane or in Love?
.
…Read more of D. Gale’s haiku.
.h
Sep 29
Posted: under Guest.
Tags: D. Gale, dating, hope, love, marriageSeptember 29th, 2009
Love?:
Negotiating
with a still-married woman…
Insane or in Love?
.
…Read more of D. Gale’s haiku.
.h
Sep 28
Posted: under Guest.
Tags: D. Gale, Europe, loss, loveSeptember 28th, 2009
Lost Love:
Postcard from afar
Venice with sun low in sky
Lydia sends her love.
.
…Read more of D. Gale’s haiku.
.h
Sep 27
Posted: under Guest.
Tags: books, D. Gale, pain, warSeptember 27th, 2009
Self-criticism:
Reading another
Armenian genocide book.
Why do I do this?
.
…Read more of D. Gale’s haiku.
.h
Sep 26
Posted: under Guest.
Tags: bachelors, D. Gale, homeSeptember 26th, 2009
Loneliness:
Refrigerator
whines in proportion to its
bachelor emptiness
.
…Read more of D. Gale’s haiku.
.h
Sep 25
Posted: under Guest.
Tags: D. Gale, medicine, painSeptember 25th, 2009
Convalescence:
Opioid non-dreams
Jarred awake, muscle spasm. Time
for medication.
.
…Read more of D. Gale’s haiku.
.h
Sep 24
Posted: under Guest.
Tags: accidents, biking, D. Gale, doctorsSeptember 24th, 2009
Bike Accident:
Neurosurgeon smiles -
“Have you considered Yoga?”
My collarbone screams.
.
…Read more of D. Gale’s haiku.
.h
Sep 22
Posted: under Guest.
Tags: D. GaleSeptember 22nd, 2009
This week we are pleased to present the haiku of D. Gale, one of our regular commenters at Haiku By Two.So much have we enjoyed his haiku and musings at this site, it is a real treat to have him as our guest.
D. Gale is a pseudonym and homage to the anonymous writer B. Traven, creator of the novel, The Death Ship.
And as an avid cyclist, a world traveler and a merchant marine, he has the life material for poetry. His work will appear here over the next seven days.
Let’s give a big welcome to D. Gale as he tells us a bit about life off the beaten path and his approach to haiku:
I’ve lived in NYC, Switzerland, Tucson and Chapel Hill and I’ve visited over 30 countries, including an ESL stint in Buenos Aires. Additionally, over five years of my life has been spent toiling away on tankers and freighters as an Able-Bodied Seaman; hence the sailing literary reference.
Currently I live in Seattle and I am between ships or “on the beach” as they say in the merchant marine. Meanwhile I keep busy indexing articles on PTSD for a government agency, a freelance position which should qualify me for some sort of psychological disability.
As an avid cyclist, my mind clears when racing down hills. I’ve been in two serious bike accidents in the past year and discovered Haiku By Two while recovering from collarbone surgery—there are two types of cyclists, those who have broken their collarbones and those who haven’t . . .yet. I began keeping a haiku journal to supplement my free prose diary. Now that I’m back on a bike, I find myself thinking in 5-7-5 while dodging traffic thanks to Alison and Kelly.
The haiku submitted reflect an acknowledgment of insignificance gained through intuition, a love of literature, dietary supplements, and time spent staring at a gray horizon for a pittance.