Tone up

You're not like the others

Everyone has their own perspective and sharing it is a gift.

On a residency another artist told me that it'd taken a therapist to explain to their significant other how important having a creative practise was for their sanity. 

As a result they moved to part-time work and are now winning prizes for innovative art.

Looking at Facebook

I keep pondering the semiotics of the images when I visit Facebook

The collage of stock library-looking photos have obviously been carefully selected to reflect values.

Having been through the process while working on marketing documents for institutions, I feel that I have an understanding of some of those decisions.

There are a disproportionate number of people of colour, above the statistical average, which signifies diversity.

The heart and smiley icons are significant symbols within the Facebook ecosystem, but here signify passions and humour -- rather than the angry-looking emoji that also plays a role in these responses.

Significantly for a platform that has been shown to promote negative emotions to drive engagement for advertisers, the site promotes itself as a happy place for friendship.

It seems ironic given how much of the newsfeed is now occupied by pages we didn't choose to follow.

The timestamp is where the darker aspects of Facebook's surveillance are acknowledged, but it is as much something that users engage in as we can see when our messages are seen by recipients as well as getting a sense of what they're doing and with whom.

Of all the roles that Facebook now plays in users' lives, it's the image of the knotted blue rope that prompted my reflection.

Why would a twisted thread be significant enough to go on the homepage of Facebook's website?

It looks sorta like a germ photographed under an electron microscope!

Yet the connotation must be that we are tied together through the website.

Although, now that I think about it, maybe I am the germ within their clean user-interface and attempting to infect your experience with some skepticism.

Facebook has been central within our societies and the suppression of journalism in favour of knee-jerk emotions and rage-baiting shows how dangerous it continues to be for democracies.

Journalism used to be known as the fourth pillar of democracy and we're still getting a sense of how communities can operate without a sense of the facts that profession would establish and interrogate.

So the deeper significance of the knot is that we're tied together by a US-based corporation as it dismantles democracies.

Lessons

Semester begins again next week and I'll be sent to practice teaching in a school during May

Yesterday I noticed the uni had given me three days to complete the checklist, which seemed strange since that deadline is ahead of the course starting and many students wouldn't be looking at emails yet.

One of the items on that list was information on the clothing that would be appropriate for a student attending a school, which surprised me to learn that denim is discouraged.

Most teachers I see dress in a smart casual way, except for special days like excursions when I feel prudish for pondering whether their pants aren't underwear. 

I have mixed feelings about teachers wearing tights or those skimpy things which resemble bike shorts, probably due to feeling that I would be cancelled if I wore them. 

Stay Cool with Marco Sebastiano Alessi

 

In a thoughtful and generous talk, Marco Sebastiano Alessi offered more than practical advice on writing poetry — he shared a philosophy of creative practice shaped by fourteen years of experimentation, collaboration, and attentive listening.

As the founder of Naviar Records, he has cultivated a unique space where haiku and music meet, inviting composers from around the world to interpret short poems through sound.

The project began with a simple moment of curiosity: reading a book of poetry while listening to music. 

From that quiet overlap grew Naviar’s Haiku Challenge, now more than a decade old. 

What started as an idea has evolved into an international online community, exhibitions, and public events — a reminder that creative ecosystems often emerge from small, personal impulses.

A Practice of Staying Cool 

Alessi’s advice to writers was grounded and refreshingly honest. Creativity, he suggested, thrives not on pressure but on steadiness.

First, block time for yourself. Poetry requires space — not only physical time but mental permission. Protecting that space signals that writing matters.

At the same time, be receptive. Ideas rarely arrive on command. They surface while walking, listening, waiting. The task is twofold: to remain open to them and to develop a reliable way of capturing them for later. A notebook, a voice memo, a fragment saved in a phone — these small habits make inspiration practical.

He emphasized refining one’s process. Writing improves through repetition and reflection. Notice what works. Notice what doesn’t. Adjust. Over time, process becomes personal craft.

Community also plays a vital role. Sharing work with like-minded people creates encouragement and dialogue. Poetry may be written alone, but it does not have to exist in isolation.

Equally important is rest. Taking breaks is not laziness but incubation. When we step away, another mental process continues quietly in the background. Returning with fresh eyes often reveals what effort alone could not.

Perhaps most crucially, Alessi encouraged writers to do it for themselves. Second-guessing what others might want leads to self-consciousness and dilution. Authenticity carries further than calculation.

Learning from others — even borrowing techniques — is part of growth. Influence is not imitation; it is conversation across time and style. Over time, writing should become part of who you are, not something external you occasionally perform.

And if the process becomes stressful? Pause and ask why. Stress can signal misalignment — with expectations, with habits, or with purpose.

What Makes a Haiku Sing   

When turning specifically to haiku submissions for Naviar Records, Alessi described what draws attention.

A strong first line matters. In such a compressed form, the opening must immediately ground the reader — offering an image, a tone, or a moment that feels alive.

Juxtaposition is central. “The fact there is a gap between concepts is where the reader is drawn,” he explained. Haiku often places two elements side by side — image and image, perception and observation — and meaning emerges in the space between them. That gap invites participation.

A successful haiku feels like a snapshot of life: self-contained, yet open. It offers enough detail to anchor the reader, but enough restraint to allow interpretation.

Above all, simplicity. Not simplicity as lack, but as refinement. The language should feel economical and elegant. Each word must justify its presence. The aesthetic lies in precision — in saying exactly enough, and no more.

The Long View 

What emerged from the talk was not a formula but a mindset. To “stay cool” is to approach writing with steadiness, curiosity, and self-trust. Build habits. Stay open. Share. Rest. Refine.

From a fleeting moment of poetry and music grew an enduring creative community. The lesson is reassuring: small, sincere acts of attention can expand far beyond their beginnings — especially when nurtured with patience and care.

The workshops are supported by Western Riverina Arts and Create NSW through financial assistance from the NSW Government

Stay Cool with Lisa Germany

 

Lisa Germany opened the session by reflecting on her own beginnings

It was early morning in Sisimiut when the “How to Haiku” presentation began. The Arctic light was soft and precise — the kind of light that seems already to understand what haiku asks of us: attention.

When she first developed a serious interest in haiku, she sought guidance from a mentor, Sean O'Connor, whose work she had encountered in various online journals. His presence in the haiku community reassured her that this was a living, evolving art form — and one that rewards careful study. 

What is haiku? 

Lisa began with the word itself. *Haiku* combines *hai* (short) and *ku* (verse). Yet its brevity is not merely about length. She offered a definition that anchored the rest of the workshop:

One moment, please 

There is a common tendency to think of haiku as seventeen “sounds.”

While this idea derives from Japanese poetic structure, those sounds are not exactly syllables in English. Rather than fixating on syllable count, Lisa encouraged participants to think in terms of "three utterances" — three breaths or natural phrases that shape the experience.

Show, don't tell 

Haiku often draws from the natural world. But nature in haiku is not decorative; it is observed.

A strong haiku shows rather than tells. It presents images instead of abstract concepts. It offers feeling rather than commentary, perception rather than explanation. The poem should move in a clear and direct path, allowing the reader to enter the moment without obstruction.

In this sense, haiku resists cleverness. It asks for clarity.

Why haiku? 

Why practice such a spare form? Because haiku gets you outside basically.

It invites connection with the natural world and anchors you in the present moment. It sharpens the powers of observation. It poses a creative challenge within tight constraints. And despite its brevity, it is timeless.

Walking into a poem 

A ginko is a haiku walk — an intentional walk taken for the purpose of observation and writing.

Lisa offered practical guidance for how to ginko:

  • Take your time.
  • Bring something to record notes.
  • Stop when something catches your attention.
  • Pay attention with all your senses.

She draws on nature journaling prompts to deepen perception:

  • I see
  • I hear
  • I smell
  • I feel
  • I taste

The key is specificity. Capture images, not generalities. Instead of “a bird,” what kind? Instead of “a cold day,” what reveals the cold?

Start with the essentials: what, where, and when.

Seasonal availability   

Traditional haiku includes a seasonal reference, but season is always context-specific. Lisa illustrated this with the striking difference between a spring breeze in Australia and a spring breeze in Greenland. The same phrase evokes entirely different sensory realities depending on place.

Haiku is rooted in lived environment. Its seasons are not abstract markers but embodied experiences:

Crafting a moment 

When shaping a haiku, begin by asking: *What is the moment?* Then present it as it came to you.

Keep the language clear and direct. Avoid ornamentation. Favor nouns and verbs over adjectives and adverbs. Let the images carry the weight.

And when revising, Lisa’s advice was firm:

Fight for the best word 

Editing is not about embellishment but precision. Each word must earn its place. In such a brief form, there is no room for excess.

One of the distinguishing moment's in Lisa's thoughtfully-researched presentation was the demonstration of how a draft had developed from the camping trip to revisiting the photographs and editing a related haiku.

In the cool light of Sisimiut, her lessons were not only about poetry. It was about attention — about stepping outside, noticing, and honoring a fleeting instant. Haiku, as Lisa Germany teaches it, is less a technical exercise and more a disciplined act of presence: one moment, keenly perceived.

The workshops are supported by Western Riverina Arts and Create NSW through financial assistance from the NSW Government

Hall in Wagga

Great work by Eastrern Riverina Arts in organising a loan of Fiona Hall's magnificent Paradisus Terrestris (1989-90)

These are my favourite artworks by my favourite living Australian artist, although I also really admire the garden she designed at the National Gallery too.

This group of intricate sculptures will be loaned from the National Gallery of Australia for two years thanks to the Sharing the National Collection program.  

I'm looking forward to looking at them again soon!

Ley leaves

"One of the good ones," is what they'll say as another politician leaves politics
 
Sussan Ley was one of those, as far as Liberals go. I appreciated that she played the role of sitting member and answered my emails on subjects like the importance of the public broadcaster and migration. I met her a couple of times and she was an effective politician in that she made a point of introducing herself.
 
One of the things not being acknowledged in Ley's departure from Parliament is how long the writing has been on both the proverbial wall and the news websites: In both 2023 and 2022 the Prime Minister intervened to ensure she was the Liberal candidate preselected for the seat of Farrer.
 
Ley leaves as the first female Liberal leader amid discussion of quotas and it's clear how much of a problem the party has with women.
 
When you consider the strong support Ley had as a sitting member with twice as many votes as the most recent opponent, it's clear the Liberal party will run a candidate across all the towns in Farrer in the forthcoming byelection. There are many towns and one expects they need to have recognition in either Albury, Deni and/or Griffith. The local members are active at all the polling stations and that is a significant achievement, however it remains to be seen if the local party membership has a say in their candidate.
 
No profile of Ley is complete without acknowledging her pilot's licence and the role it plays in covering a massive electorate like Farrer. The Liberals gained the seat with Ley when The Nationals' Tim Fischer resigned and the Coalition agreement means it is open for both parties to contest given there's no incumbent. The Nationals role has shrunk in the region as independent Helen Dalton took the state electorate of Murray many years ago. Given Dalton's interest in water legislation, the opportunity to play a role in federal parliament must interest her but it would be expensive to attempt a campaign without party funding. 
 
A group of irrigators have contributed to previous independent candidates in their campaigns against Ley, as has Climate 200, but neither have the numbers of actual human resources that the local Liberal branches send to polling stations. While The Nationals still have a presence in the region, One Nation now has Barnaby Joyce for publicity and it will be a sign of whether the party is ready to run a federal campaign if he spends much time in the Riverina.

Detention or anal retention

My son is the number one fan for Dr John and has an assignment to write a piece of music, so I suggested that he change the lyrics to one of his songs to comment on how kids won't crap at school: 

Oh my
L33T0N High 
taught me to crap
in my own time

Their bathroom stalls
don't have doors
unless you like gaping with kids vaping
then you'll never cross that tiled floor

I wouldn't be in the shit if I could have shit
said I wouldn't be in the shit if I could have shit
I wouldn't have backed out to back it out
if I could have shit
so I wouldn't be in the shit if I could have shit