
🌙 The Weaver’s Breath: Celebrating National Haiku Poetry Day
Welcome, seekers and starlit souls. Today, April 17, the veil between the spoken word and the spirit world thins just a fraction more. As the wheel turns to National Haiku Poetry Day, we find ourselves invited to practice a specific kind of magic: the art of the brief, the potent, and the elemental.
In the craft, we know that intent doesn’t require a lecture; it requires a spark. A haiku is exactly that—seventeen syllables that capture the essence of a moment before it dissolves into the ether.
The Anatomy of a Spell (in 5-7-5)
A haiku is structured in three short lines. Think of it as a ritual in three parts: The Invocation, The Manifestation, and The Release.
- Line One (5 Syllables): Set the scene or call the element.
- Line Two (7 Syllables): The heart of the vision or the action.
- Line Three (5 Syllables): The lingering echo or the “So mote it be.”
Why Haikus are Witchy
Poetry is just spellcasting with better punctuation. By limiting our words, we force our intuition to pick the “charged” ones. When you write a haiku, you aren’t just describing a crow on a fence; you are anchoring the energy of that crow into the physical realm using the vibration of your voice.
Three Enchantments for Your Journal
Feel free to recite these by candlelight today to align your energy:
I. For the Hearth
Lavender bundles (5) Drying by the kitchen door (7) Peace dwells in this wood (5)
II. For the Silver Lady
Pale glow on the moss (5) Midnight tea cools in my palms (7) Stars drink from the well (5)
III. For the Shadow Work
Old bones in the dirt (5) What died makes the garden grow (7) Roots hold every secret (5)
Cast Your Own Syllables
Today, I challenge you to step outside. Don’t look for a “topic”—look for a feeling. Is it the scent of damp earth? The way the wind rattles the chimes?
Write it down. Capture the ghost of the moment in seventeen syllables and let it live on the page. Poetry is the oldest grimoire we have.
Stay grounded, stay magic.
With moonlight and ink,
Moonzie