A Yellow Susuwatari

She’s hidden her egg sack in the needles of a pine branch, a pale yellow susuwatari. A few golden strands of her web have snapped and congealed into a larger, tangled one. The larder appears full, two strings of “black pearls”.

the orb weaver

sitting motionless for days

nothing gold can stay

©️sbwright2023

Love’s labour

Right now, my wife is teaching herself to play Keane’s, Somewhere Only We Know, on the concert grand. She’s probably frustrated she’s not getting it perfect, but something in that imperfection, in reaching for the right notes, generates an overwhelming sense of yūgen.

love’s labour

between the notes a single tear

rolls down my cheek

©️sbwright2023

Portuguese visitors

The millipedes are on the move again. We live in an old farmhouse, so there’s no sense in trying to keep them out. This variety are a pest, the Portuguese black millipede, accidentally introduced in the 1950’s. Our kittens have fun using them as hockey pucks when they curl into a spiral.

late autumn rain

the new kittens discover the taste

of millipedes

©️sbwright2023

Little Jobs

One thing we kept noticing when we moved into our 120 year old farmhouse, was the little odd jobs that seemed to be jerry-rigged or a least done by someone with questionable experience and qualifications. Light switches were the most concerning. We thought it might be the “mend and make do” attitude common amoung a certain generation. We soon found out, however, that tradesmen didn’t want to turn up for “little jobs”.

fixing the leak

I call the plumber

with a big job

©️sbwright2023

Floundering

South Australia’s Mid-North is littered with monuments to colonial hubris, skeletal settlements that proved the addage, “Rain follows the plow”, wrong.



last drinks

the old hotel floundering

in all directions

©️sbwright2023

Tokyo Rush-hour

I guess in a densely populated island country, consideration for others is as much a matter of survival as that of civility. Commuter trains packed with workers are silent for the most part, the press of humanity seems strange without the accompanying tension of loud voices on phones, people talking annimatedly, or music blasting the eardrums of nonchalant teens.

Tokyo rush-hour

not even the sound

of a car horn

©️Sbwright2023

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