May 12

Haiku 860

Posted: under Alison's Haiku, Daily Haiku.
Tags: , , , May 12th, 2011

by Alison

by Alison

deep stretch

runs up and down my thigh -

purple cork gym floors

Comments (2)

Feb 01

Haiku 762

Posted: under Alison's Haiku, Daily Haiku.
Tags: , , , , February 1st, 2011

by Alison

by Alison

.

.

.

.


with this DVD

I stretch into my poor back

and watch the snow fall

Comments (0)

Jan 31

Haiku 780

Posted: under Alison's Haiku, Daily Haiku.
Tags: , , January 31st, 2011

by Alison

by Alison

shoveling snow is

not the same as yoga class -

I crave a retreat

Comments (3)

Dec 27

Haiku 726

Posted: under Alison's Haiku, Daily Haiku.
Tags: , , , December 27th, 2010

by Alison

by Alison

chasing naughty dog

around the house in circles -

I remove my socks

Comments (0)

Apr 23

The Sound of One Thigh Clapping by Meredith Clair

Posted: under Kelly's Haiku, Reviews.
Tags: , , , April 23rd, 2009

by Kelly

by Kelly

I am the proud owner of a gym membership. When I joined last fall, I had all sorts of ideas about how often I’d hit the gym, how aerobic, toned, flexible and dedicated I would be.

And I go. I go to the gym, but . . . But I’m not nearly as dedicated as I had hoped I would be.

Winter in Minnesota is dark and cold, and it’s much easier to stay indoors than it is to venture out.  This course of action — or rather inaction — has resulted in some extra padding, extra padding I’d love to shed now that spring appears to have sprung.

I was, therefore, able to relate with this tiny little book: The Sound of One Thigh Clapping: Haiku for a Thinner You.

The author, Meredith Clair, is a serial dieter, and in the midst of attending yet another weight-loss class, it hits her that the act of dieting is a lot like the act of writing haiku.

“To write a good haiku,” Clair says in her introduction, “one must pare down, economize, and make sacrafices.”

Dieting, of course, requires the same. And so it was that Clair found writing haiku to be a perfect side dish to her weight-loss plan.

I guffawed at many of her haiku, including this one:

So sweet. So creamy.

Yet so diabolical.

Dulce de Leche.

It immediately reminded me of Alison, my haiku’ing partner and a lover of dulce de leche. She picked up that love, of course, during our English-teaching days in Buenos Aires.

This one also jumped out at me:

This Filet-O-Fish

is neither fish nor filet.

And yet, I eat it.

As soon as I saw the words “filet-o-fish” that dang McDonald’s commercial started running through my head!

Filet-O-Fish aside, however, this little book inspired me to write my own diet-themed haiku:

Chocolate is breakfast.

Disagree if you want but

my mind is made up.

Now all I need is the inspiration to step away from the computer (I already know I won’t put down the chocolate) and hit the gym.

Comments (4)