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    haiku

    Explore " haiku" with insightful episodes like "Meditation | KVINDERS HAIKU | Peter Høeg", "Twilight Hours by Sadakichi Hartmann", "The People Upstairs - Ogden Nash", "Episode 62: Kobayashi Issa, Haiku" and "Episode 75: The First Time I Had Rare Steak" from podcasts like ""LIGE FRA HJERTET", "Words in the Air", "1 Minute with The Bald-Headed Poet", "Poetry For All" and "Nervous Laughter Podcast"" and more!

    Episodes (60)

    Meditation | KVINDERS HAIKU | Peter Høeg

    Meditation | KVINDERS HAIKU | Peter Høeg

    Haiku er en oprindelig japansk form for poesi som i sin grundform består af 16 eller 17 stavelser eller lydlige enheder.

    Genren går langt tilbage - men som samlebetegnelse er ordet haiku kun lidt mere end 100 år gammel.


    Haiku er og var oprindelig forbundet med den japanske zenbuddhisme, og er i sin dybeste form en opvågningspraksis.


    Der er i traditionel haiku altid et kireji som oversættes som et cutting word. Hvor meningen er at det etablerer en pause, et lille emotionelt peak eller/og et lille chok som skal skabe et brud i den almindelige duale bevidsthedstrøm.


    Oftest rummer et haiku også et kigo, et ord som forankrer digtet i en bestemt årstid, oftest ved en reference til naturen. I Matsuo Bashos haiku -  det kendteste af alle - er årstiden, foråret, angivet ved en frø:


    Gammel dam

    En frø springer i

    Lyden af vand/vandets lyd/plask!


    Haiku bygger på en lovmæssighed i den menneskelige bevidsthed: Hvis det lykkes os at samle en helhed, hvad enten det er en naturiagttagelse, et overblik over vores liv eller en anden dyb sansning eller iagttagelse og udtrykke den, opstår der efter udtrykket en kreativ/spirituel åbenhed. Hvis man det øjeblik praktiserer, lader sig synke indad, har man mulighed for at nærme sig et åbent sted i hjertet og bevidstheden.


    I denne meditation inviterer Peter os til, med hjælp fra kvindelige poeters haiku, at undersøge denne åbenhed. Også ved selv, uprætentiøst og ligetil, at improvisere et haiku for os selv.

    Besøg os her:
    kontemplation.dk

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    Du er velkommen til at skrive til os her:
    kontakt@kontemplation.dk

    The People Upstairs - Ogden Nash

    The People Upstairs - Ogden Nash

    The People Upstairs, By: Ogden Nash

    The people upstairs all practise ballet
     Their living room is a bowling alley
     Their bedroom is full of conducted tours.
     Their radio is louder than yours,
     They celebrate week-ends all the week.
     When they take a shower, your ceilings leak.
     They try to get their parties to mix
     By supplying their guests with Pogo sticks,
     And when their fun at last abates,
     They go to the bathroom on roller skates.
     I might love the people upstairs more
     If only they lived on another floor.





    Poems are green and Poetry is mean.
    -Poetry Beast

    Please accept my endless gratitude,
    I'm tickled pink,
    You're a gift!
    Thank you for your time and attention.
    It's a blessing you've stopped to observe and listen.

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    Episode 62: Kobayashi Issa, Haiku

    Episode 62: Kobayashi Issa, Haiku
    What makes haiku "the perfect poetic form"? This episode reads three wonderful haiku by Kobayashi Issa and explores what makes them so moving and fun. We use the beautiful translations of award-winning poet Robert Haas in The Essential Haiku: Versions of Basho, Buson, and Issa. To see these haiku and others online, visit The Poetry Foundation here (https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/50983/selected-haiku-by-issa). To see (and purchase) the book, see HarperCollins here (https://www.harpercollins.com/products/essential-haiku-volume-20-hass?variant=32118145876002). Thank you to HarperCollins for permission to read these translations on our podcast. For more on Kobayashi Issa, visit the Poetry Foundation here (https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poets/kobayashi-issa).

    Episode 75: The First Time I Had Rare Steak

    Episode 75: The First Time I Had Rare Steak

    Yup, we’re talking about BudLight stuff! Hopefully things you haven’t heard about yet - including an original haiku by Jamie! We’re starting at the beginning with Disney Princess Dylan and ending with…well…some cranky conservative dudes who love public bathrooms. Grab you a $6 Conservative Dad’s Ultra Right 100% Woke Free American Beer and settle in for some man baby cringe

    Dylan’s Ad: https://youtu.be/CVGDPlG42bU

    Kid Rock Baby tantrum: https://youtube.com/shorts/TyrLKNF2Cys?feature=share

    Fock Budlight: https://youtu.be/c5JOq0V0hAY

    Conservative Dad’s Ultra Right 100% Woke Free American Beer ad: https://youtu.be/KUokwmZcFMM

    Write us some of your cringe stories at [nervouslaughterpodcast@gmail.com](mailto:nervouslaughterpodcast@gmail.com)

    The socials: [Instagram](https://www.instagram.com/nervouslaughterpodcast) | [Facebook](https://www.facebook.com/NervousLaughterPodcast) | [Twitter](https://twitter.com/NervouslaughPod)

    #3-4 Metti in pausa il film della tua ansia - ospite Salvatore Ciconte

    #3-4 Metti in pausa il film della tua ansia - ospite Salvatore Ciconte

    In questa puntata Alessandro Calderoni intervista Salvatore Ciconte, già campione europeo di kick boxing, preparatore atletico, maratoneta: quanto contano e come si amministrano ansia e rabbia nello sport? Per la sezione "trucchi del mestiere" viene proposta la tecnica del film dell'ansia: impara a mettere in pausa i momenti di crisi, agganciando risorse e osservando come cambia il corpo. Con Davide Burchiellaro di themillennial.it si affronta il tema della disintermediazione,  che in ambito economico indica l'assenza di mediazione tra offerta e domanda, ma in ambito sociologico e in periodo di social media fa riflettere sulla crisi dei modelli e sul protagonismo/personalismo generazionale. Le "belle notizie" di questa puntata ci portano a scoprirci poeti grazie a un giornale giapponese che pubblica gli haiku dei lettori, e a viaggiare in Buthan per scoprire sei criteri di felicità.

    Grazie per l'ascolto. Seguici sul nostro sito, su Facebook o Instagram.

    Ep 89 Art, Creativity, and the Contemplative

    Ep 89 Art, Creativity, and the Contemplative

    Art and creativity can be a useful way of opening our awareness. So many moments in our lives can leave us feeling disconnected and out of touch. Today we talk about how engaging our creative side can help us slow down and open to possibility. We name our own struggles with feeling vulnerable and inadequate. And we share our moments of feeling like we’ve broken through the veil in order to encounter the Divine. We hope you’ll join us as we engage in the reality that art is everywhere, painted into the very fabric of our world. 

    #Poetry #Retreat #Labyrinth #Mandala #Vulnerability #MovementMeditation #Crafts #Haiku #Color #Chakras #VisioDivina

    For Transcript:
    Go to the "Transcript" Tab.
    If you are in a player that does not have the Transcript Tab, use the link below:
    https://thecontemplativelife.buzzsprout.com/1642654/11373264-ep-89-art-creativity-and-the-contemplative

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    The Spirit of Shizen: The Nature of Japan through 72 Seasons, with Robert Weis

    The Spirit of Shizen: The Nature of Japan through 72 Seasons, with Robert Weis

    Podcast host Amy Chavez talks to Robert Weis, curator of the Luxembourg Natural History Museum's upcoming exhibit, “Spirit of Shizen – The Nature of Japan through 72 Seasons,” running from July 1 to August 31, 2022. 

    An accompanying catalogue, in the form of an anthology, will be published featuring essays by prominent writers on Japan's seasons.

    Amy starts off the show asking  Weis, a paleontologist, how he ended up curating the exhibition “Spirit of Shizen” Weis explains his childhood fascination with fossils, his work at the museum, and his love for Japan. He says Mark Horvane, a Kyoto-based garden designer, was an adviser to the exhibition.

    Amy expounds upon the meaning of "72-microseasons" as outlined in Mark Horvane's essay of the same title included in the museum catalogue/anthology.

    While some Japanese arts and activities have obvious links to nature, such as  Ikebana flower arrangement, bonsai, gardens or cherry-blossom viewing, Weis notes that other links may not be so obvious, such as those in haiku poetry, Japanese sweets, or even the passing of time. These tie-ins to the seasons will brought into focus via workshops, demonstrations, and a publication that focuses on Japanese culture and nature.

    Workshops include a Miksang contemporary photography workshop with John Einarsen, a calligraphy session by Japanese artist Rie Takeda, an exploration into the tea ceremony by Bruce Hamana, and a workshop on the seasons as related to Zen, presented by French Buddhist nun and author Kankyo Tannier. A movie, produced by Felicity Tillack especially for the exhibition, will delve into the seasons of Kyoto, and a gastronomic event coordinated with a local Japanese restaurant will look at the role of the seasons in Japanese cuisine. Visitors can enjoy a mock tea-house with tatami mats or enjoy tea in the museum's garden.

    "Spirit of Shizen" (shizen means "nature" in Japanese), also offers an accompanying catalog/anthology of essays penned by prominent writers on Japan. The publication will be available in the Museum Store and as an online purchase.

    Following is the contents of the publication, which is divided into four parts, with Pico Iyer penning an introductory essay for each section/season.

    "Spirit of Shizen" Anthology

    Table of Contents

    AUTUMN – Radiant Wistfulness, by Pico Iyer

    • Momiji-gari - Tracking Down the Colored Leaves, by Rebecca Otowa
    • A Late Autumn Walk in Nara, by Robert Weis
    • Naturally Attuned to the Seasons, by Edward Levinson
    • The Japanese 72 Micro-seasons, by Mark Hovane

    WINTER – Blue Invigoration, by Pico Iyer

    • First Winter in Ohara, by Patrick Colgan
    • Ontakesan - Seasonal Elements of a Sacred Japanese Mountain, by Jann Williams
    • Kigo: Seasonal Words and Seasonality in Haiku, by Kawaharada Mayumi
    • Nature is Culture, by Sébastien Raizer

    SPRING – Pink-and-white Flutter, by Pico Iyer

    • Petals on a Wet Black Bough, by Amanda Huggins
    • Sakura, by Naoko Abe
    • Seasons of the Seto Inland Sea, by Amy Chavez
    • The Beauty of Japanese Gardens, by Yuri Ugayaya

    SUMMER – Festivals in the Sultry Nights, by Pico Iyer

    • The Message in the Garden, by Marc Peter Keane
    • Awareness of the Seasons in the Tea Ceremony (Chanoyu), by Bruce Hamana
    • Mosses for the Ages, by Karen Lee Tawarayama
    • Notes on Ikebana, by Mark Hovane
    • Tsuyu – Between the Sheets, by Edward J. Taylor

    Weis advises that there are no coronavirus restrictions right now for visiting Luxembourg or the museum.

    At the end of the show, Amy asks Weis to name his favorite books on Japan:

    The Lady and the Monk: Four Seasons in Kyoto, by Pico Iyer

    South of the Border, West of the Sun, by Haruki Murakami

    The Japanese Chronicles, by Nicolas Bouvier

    About Robert Weis

    Robert Weis is the author of over thirty scientific publications about Jurassic fossils. He has nourished a deep interest in Eastern Asian cultures, and especially Japan, since his childhood. He practices Zen meditation and the art of Bonsai and is especially interested in Japanese garden culture. Accounts on his Japanese travels can be found on his blog theroutetokyoto.com. He is the curator of the exhibition “Spirit of Shizen – The Nature of Japan through 72 seasons,” to be held at the Luxembourg Natural History Museum during summer 2022. He is also a travel writer for Luxembourg’s travel magazine "DIARIES OF." His book Rocklines: A Geopoetic Journey across the Minett Unesco Biosphere, co-authored with Italian geopoet Davide S. Sapienza, will be on release in July 2022.

    The Books on Asia Podcast is sponsored by Stone Bridge Press. Check out their books on Japan at www.stonebridge.com.

    Your podcast host is Amy Chavez, author of Amy’s Guide to Best Behavior in Japan, and The Widow, the Priest and the Octopus Hunter: Discovering a Lost Way of Life on a Secluded Japanese Island.

    Don’t miss out on upcoming episodes with Asia's best authors and translators by subscribing to the Books on Asia podcast.

    Ep 70 Poetry and the Contemplative Life

    Ep 70 Poetry and the Contemplative Life

    Poetry can sometimes feel like an acquired taste, like maybe you either love it or you don’t. But what many of us find as we pursue a contemplative life is that poetry can become a helpful way to slow down and take a nice, long look. We sometimes find that poetry becomes a doorway to being able to drink in that present moment. So join us as we talk about the power of poems to aid our engagement of the world around us using our senses, emotions, and intuitions.

     Additional Resources
    Book:
    Where the Sidewalk Ends by Shel Silverstein
    Book: The Amateur Contemplative by Li-Young Lee
    Book: Susceptible to Light by Chelan Harkin 

    #Poetry
    #Haiku
    #Emotions
    #Feelings

    For Transcript:
    Go to the "Transcript" Tab.
    If you are in a player that does not have the Transcript Tab, use the link below:
    https://thecontemplativelife.buzzsprout.com/1642654/10628167-ep-70-poetry-and-the-contemplative-life

    Support the show

    Feedback - A Rewarding Way To Be Seen As Having Leadership Potential #121

    Feedback - A Rewarding Way To Be Seen As Having Leadership Potential #121
    How do you give great feedback? How do you do it in a way that is honest, constructive and motivational? This episode gives you some guidelines to follow if you want to do a great job of giving feedback and hence positioning yourself as leadership potential whilst boosting the performance and loyalty of your team.

    Liza Dalby on Geisha, Kimonos, and Translating Setouchi Jakucho's "Places"

    Liza Dalby on Geisha, Kimonos, and Translating Setouchi Jakucho's "Places"

    In this episode of the Books on Asia Podcast, sponsored by Stone Bridge Press, host Amy Chavez talks with anthropologist, shamisen player, author, and translator Liza Dalby about her books and her new translation of the recently deceased novelist cum Buddhist nun Jakuchō Setouchi's memoir "Places."

    Liza is author of the Geisha, Kimono: Fashioning Culture, East Wind Melts the Ice: A Guide to Serenity Through the Seasons, and  Hidden Buddhas: A Novel of Karma and Chaos. Her previous translations include Little Songs of Geisha: Traditional Japanese Ko-Uta.

    Amy and Liza talk about Liza's long career writing about Japan, starting with Geisha and how that world of women changed along with the modernization of Japanese society, why the geisha survive today, and the meaning of the word "kimono." They also discuss different kinds of kimono, the difference between the yukata (often called a "summer kimono") and a robe. Liza lets us in on the controversy behind the original cover of Tale of Murasaki and how and why she convinced the publisher to change it to the current one.

    They also talk about the controversies behind Setouchi Jakuchō, how Liza came to translate her autobiography, and how she missed a chance to talk to Jakuchō during a visit to Kyōto.

    Lastly, Liza reveals her  favorite books on Japan:

    Visit Liza Dalby's website.

    The Books on Asia Podcast is sponsored by Stone Bridge Press. Check out their books on Japan at the publisher's website.

    A conversation, Haiku within medicine, Coping with burnout

    A conversation, Haiku within medicine, Coping with burnout
    Frank Clark, MD, wrote poetry in medical school to cope with depression. Now, with the strain of COVID-19, he crafts haiku.📺 Follow the AMA on YouTube: @americanmedicalassociation  🎥 Watch #AMAUpdate for the latest in health care news for physicians: https://bit.ly/AMA_Update 📧 Subscribe to AMA Morning Rounds newsletter, with the news you need every morning delivered to your inbox: https://bit.ly/AMA-MorningRounds  🎧 Listen to our latest podcast episodes now: https://bit.ly/AMA_Podcasts  📲 Download AMA Connect for news, podcasts, video updates and learning in one place: https://apple.co/3URzNES

    Meredith McKinney on Saigyō and "Gazing at the Moon"

    Meredith McKinney on Saigyō and "Gazing at the Moon"

    On this episode of the Books on Asia Podcast, sponsored by Stone Bridge Press, we have guest interviewer Lisa Wilcut speaking with award-winning writer and translator Meredith McKinney. McKinney is translator of many Japanese classics such as Sei Shonagon's 11th-century "The Pillow Book" and the 14th-century "Essays in Idleness," which was published along with "Hōjōki." She has also translated "Kusamakura" and "Kokoro" (see our review) by Natsume Sōseki, one of Japan's most celebrated modern writers. Today, she is going to talk about her long career and also about her just-released book on the wandering poet Saigyō called "Gazing at the Moon" (Shambala, September, 2021).

    The Books on Asia Podcast is sponsored by Stone Bridge Press, publisher of fine books on Asia for over 30 years. Subscribe to the Books on Asia Podcast.

    About the Interviewer

    Lisa Wilcut is a writer, editor, translator, and educator based in Yokohama. She writes and edits works on Japanese culture for both scholarly and general audiences and teaches courses in Japanese society and culture as well as philosophy at the University of Maryland Global Campus in Yokosuka. She holds an MA in Japanese language and literature from Stanford University and an MA in philosophy from San Francisco State University. She also writes short fiction and poetry. Find her on LinkedIn.

    Ever Forward into the Heart of the Storm

    Ever Forward into the Heart of the Storm

    Life has been crazy, so Em's got a short one for you this week -- she talks about writing and changing up her writing process with her weekly writing project, Heart of the Storm. Plus, she discusses Ever Forward - a book of haikus by Claire Thom with watercolor illustration by her dad, Colin Thom.



    www.juststrong.com          Code: EMIFRA110


    Ever Forward by Claire Thom with watercolors by Colin Thom


    Help support the pod & get fun, bonus content by subscribing to the Patreon!


    Check out Em’s books, plays, and stories at frappmedia.com


    And, you can find all things books & cats at
    booksncatspod.com

    Support the show

    Copilots Review Episode 31- Senryu Girl

    Copilots Review Episode 31- Senryu Girl

    In this review we'll talk about Senryu Girl, a show where the main character only communicates through poems. It might take us quite a bit more than 17 syllables, but we'll let you know if this show is something to wax poetic about or not.


    New episodes on the 2nd and 22nd of every month, with interstitial episodes released on the 12th.

    And now you can find us on Youtube. Check us out here --> Copilots Review on Youtube

    If you would like to contact us or recommend a series for us to watch/listen/play/otherwise interact with and review you can email us at CopilotsReview@gmail.com or reach us on Twitter at @copilotsreview, or join the Discord or find all of these options at copilotsreview.simplecast.com. Thanks again!

    Also, even though the social media hype has died down, protests have lessened in frequency and it's no longer "trending"; discrimination based on race is still an issue in our country. In fact in addition to our usual link to BLM we are supplying links to organizations that seek to help with the problems of violence against the Asian American and Pacific Islander populace, violence that has only unfortunately skyrocketed within the COVID-19 Pandemic. To help and/or educate yourself please follow these links.
    The Asian American Legal Defense and Education Fund
    Asian Americans Advancing Justice
    Asian Pacific Fund

    Lastly we want to thank Jessica Kuczynski! She designed our awesome podcast art. You can find her other work, her shop or commission her for original art at her website jessicakuczynski.com or at her twitter.