Bruce J. Wood Haiku Poems

Haiku is a celebration of beauty of the present moment.

I have a love affair with haiku poetry and have written hundreds of haiku poems over many years. What captures my fascination is how a haiku poem can make such a profound aesthetic statement in only 17 syllables or less. Haiku is refreshing and distinct from other poetic forms. The short format forces the poet to communicate the intended poetic concept in its essence with brevity and clarity.

A haiku poem is seldom planned, it often comes to mind fully written. The poem is triggered by seeing a moment that causes one to stop in awe – like a butterfly landing on my sleeve; or listening to a mother on the train sing a lullaby to her baby; or seeing a young child catch a snowflake on her tongue; or watching a sunset reflected on a lake, then suddenly, swans land on the reflection.

And then there was One (Tundra Swan) by Juli deGrummond — Apalachee Audubon Society

All of the following haiku poems are by Bruce J. Wood, founder of Aoide Magazine.

The crackle of raining acorns,
hitting dried leaves,
breaks the cricket’s song

The oak tree limb
emerged out of the mist,
carrying a robin’s nest

Sunset over the lake—
a blue heron’s shadow
stretches to the other shore

Wilderness trail,
woods and marshes,
where escaped party balloons go to die

Footprints
of morning dew
lead back from the garden

Everyone on the train
listened to the mother
singing a lullaby to her baby

The Tranquil Zen Garden of Kyoto | Travel| Smithsonian Magazine

Melting snow
reveals a face
carved on a pumpkin

Young boys used
Nativity scene characters
to play battle games

In the boulevard median
geese honk
at passing cars

Morning coffee,
I watch a groundhog
eat the neighbor’s flowers

Twigs used for
snowman arms, hug the
same spot all summer long

The Zen Dilemma

The hawk freezes,
perched on the fence railing,
then darts off in an instant

In the open field,
the geese heads bob up and down
among the Queen Anne’s lace

Dusk lingers,
fireflies vanish in the mist
along the river banks

Woodpecker cadence echoes
through the tall pines,
among a sea of ferns

Small wooden bridge over a creek,
left a coin for the troll,
just in case

Just a wooden bench,
on a cliff, overlooks a
horse shoe bend in the river flowing through

the wilderness, and a hawk set in a blue sky
gliding on a soft cool breeze
Old scarecrow

diligently guards
the abandoned cornfield
Garden flowers

reach out over
the stone wall enclosure
The old man

hums Broadway show tunes
on the morning bus
Woman walks her dog —

lets him dig holes
in the neighbor’s flowerbed
Kids playing

baseball in the park,
use an old shoe for home plate

C:\Users\Bruce\Pictures\canada-wildlife-tour[1].jpg

Remote campsite,
all night acorns drop on dry leaves,
in bear country

At dusk,
the silhouette of a cat
is caught in my headlights

At a stop light,
a lone coyote crosses the road,
then looks back at me

Line for a love poem
scribbled on a gum wrapper,
found a year later

The shopping cart —
comes with a kid who
makes motor sounds

The cat stays on
the stone tiles when
walking through the garden

Ice storm –
tree tops now
bow to the ground

The raccoon and I froze
watching each other
for the longest time

Mailman
walks a zig zag pattern
to avoid barking dogs

Old forgotten shoes,
years later remember
my lasting impression

December warm spell,
busy squirrels gather
last minute supplies

After thirty years,
toys in attic still wait
to be played with

Floating leaves twirl,
my mind drifts with them
to the open sea

Frigid morning,
robin runs across field
instead of flying

A Mexican woman makes tortillas
and sings a Hail Mary
for each one

C:\Users\Bruce\Pictures\pexels-photo-757232.jpeg

Campsite breakfast
shared with a butterfly
sipping nectar from a flower

Saturday, spent the whole day
watching a swan
circle the lake

Outside screen door,
a baby chipmunk wants to play;
scolding parents drag him away

Crows announce my approach;
a circling hawk guards
her field of ripe pumpkins

Young boy traced
his finger along each
rim of the train seat

In a sudden down pour,
I shared an awning
with a spider

Deer tracks in snow,
emerge from the woods, then
abruptly stop, going nowhere

Today in the park,
tadpoles swim in
children’s mason jars

Sunshine reflects off
drifting snow, a perched dove
looks back at me

August evening,
yellow moon nudges
the mountain peak

A flock of birds
settles, then a
tsunami wave in the air

Defiant, the ant boldly
walked across the table
top in full view

C:\Users\Bruce\Pictures\f61121d88d926245473e2e3718a28d36[1].jpg

Swooping owl,
vanished into
the pitch of darkness

Twilight –
shadows slowly emerge
from their hiding places

Summer –
tall grasses conceal
the unused lawn mower

The three huddled birds’
eyes squint with each
drop of rain

Night sky –
fireflies and stars
merge and twinkle together

Flowers turned
to face the sun before
shedding their petals

Stork stands on the pier,
waits for my
unused fish bait

With enough wine,
the old cottage
looks quaint

Bruce J. Wood
Bruce J. Wood
Bruce J. Wood, founder of AOIDE Bruce J. Wood has worked on Wall Street in business finance and strategy, and has written hundreds of finance business plans, strategic plans, economic feasibility studies, and economic impact studies. Bruce has lectured on creativity and strategic thinking, as well as worked on the development of numerous publishing, film, television, and performing arts projects, along with downtown revitalizations, using the arts as an economic catalyst. As an aficionado of music, art, and dance, Bruce is also a writer and an outdoor enthusiast. He has written poetry, blogs, articles, and many creative project concepts. He lives in the Metro Detroit area and enjoys writing poetry, backpacking, and ballroom dancing.

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