HAIKUsutradhar : 6th March 2026
- Gauri
- Mar 6
- 3 min read
A FRIDAY FEATURE
Host: Gauri Dixit Mentor: Kanjini Devi
Prompter for March : Saumya Bansal
OUR MISSION
1. To provide a new poetry workshop each Friday, along with a prompt.
2. To select haiku, senryu, and haiga each month for the journal, haikuKATHA. Each issue will select poems that were posted in this forum from the 1st of the previous month to the 30th or 31st of the previous month.
FEEDBACK GUIDELINES ( Included as a guideline, please do not be constrained by these while proving feedback )
Let the feedback be specific and constructive. Don’t be vague. Here are some helpful lines you could use to give feedback.
What is working for me :
1. The seasonal reference is good.
2. The image is very clear.
3. I love the internal rhythm.
4. When read aloud, the poem flows well.
5. The 'cut' which is so important in haiku is effectively done here.
6. I like the format ...it's short,long, short. Nice
7. I love the indent you have given
Points that aren't working for me:
1. The image is abstract
2. The lines are long.
3. Some words are redundant and can be safely removed.
4. The lightness of haiku isn't here.
5. Abstract words take away the haiku's charm
6. There is no 'cut' (kire) in this haiku.
7. There are two kigo (seasonal words) in this ku.
8. This is reading more like free verse.
9. This ku is reading as three separate lines. There is no connect.
SUBMISSION GUIDELINES
1. Post a maximum of two verses per week, from Friday to Friday, numbered 1 & 2. Post only one haiku in a day, in 24 hours.
2. Only post unpublished verses --- nothing that has appeared in peer-reviewed or edited journals, anthologies, your webpage, social media, etc.
3. Only post original verses.
4. For each poem you post, comment on one other person’s poem.
5. Give feedback only to those poets who have requested it.
6. Do not post a variety of drafts, along with a request for readers to choose which they like most. Only one poem is to appear in each original post.
7. Post each revision, if you have any, above the original. The top version will be your submission to haikuKATHA. Do not delete the original post.
8. Do not submit found poetry or split sequences.
9. Do not post photos, except for haiga.
10. haikuKATHA will only consider haiga that showcase original artwork or photos. Post details re: the source of the visual image. If you team up with an artist or photographer, make sure that it’s their original work and that they are not restricted by other publications to share it. We won't be responsible for any copyright issues.
11. Put your name, followed by your country, below each poem, even after revisions.
12. Notification about all selected poems for each issue will be posted on CELEBRATION -on 10th of each month.
Poems that do not follow the guidelines may be deleted.
Founder/Managing Editor of haikuKATHA Monthly Journal:
Kala Ramesh
Associate Editors: Ashish Narain Firdaus Parvez Priti Aisola Sanjuktaa Asopa Shalini Pattabiraman Suraja Menon Roychowdhury Vandana Parashar Vidya Shankar
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IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT
6th February 2026:
The majority of poets at Triveni Haikai India do want feedback. Instead of making them all write "Feedback welcome," why not ask the minority to write "No feedback, thank you"?
That way, the minority's wish would be much more noticeable, and the majority would be saved the slight inconvenience of having to write "Feedback welcome" on every single post.
Please follow this suggestion.
This excellent suggestion came from Lev Hart, and I thank him from the bottom of my heart.
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PROMPT:
6th March
Saumya Bansal
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Week 1 - Passersby
Recently, I came across a unique word, sonder, which intrigued me. It was coined by John Koenig in 2012 in The Dictionary of Obscure Sorrows. The Merriam-Webster Dictionary defines sonder as “the profound, sudden realization that every random passerby is living a life as vivid, complex, and chaotic as your own—complete with their own ambitions, friends, routines, and worries, in which you are merely an extra in the background.”
This week, let us write about those passersby: people we pass on the streets, the ones we notice at traffic signals, and those who stroll past us in the park. Though they pass through our day briefly, they are part of our shared human interconnectedness.
Example:
mid spring
Vivaldi from the earbuds
of a passerby
— Claire Everett
Have you ever caught a glimpse of a passerby’s story? Does a fleeting moment with them still linger with you?
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Looking forward to reading your haiku. Poems outside the prompt can also be posted.
Write on! Gauri

#1
on my steps
the newspaper boy's
perfect throw
Sudha Shetty,
Kerala, India
#2 3-12-26
channel surfing
a familiar face
in a different show
Jennifer Gurney, US
#1
13 March 2026
sadness
in his smile—
my favorite grocery clerk
Tim Dwyer
Bangor Northern Ireland/Brooklyn USA
#2
kirtan notes
the calm breeze
this evening
Arvinder Kaur
Chandigarh India
Haiga
12.3.26
bus ride
I share the newspaper
with a stranger
Mona Bedi
India
Feedback appreciated:)