Zuihitsu: More Than
Always it goes back to control
Possession of more than the guy across the ocean
bombs and guns
air raids and straits
Casually, causalities increase
in geometric sequence
The war mongers are happy
The common folk are agitated in
Scared streams of tears and frustrations
Why why, the simple minded ask
Isn't food and shelter enough
Is sharing ever an option
© gillena cox 2026
MTB: Zuihitsu
NOTE:随筆 | Zuihitsu
While the zuihitsu is frequently compared to an essay, Hahn showed its possibilities as a poetic text. In a 2021 article for the American Poetry Review, Hahn wrote: Zuihitsu, literally, “running brush”; This uniquely Japanese genre is a poetic text lacking the formal structural principles we associate with Western verse. Through a variety of techniques—fragmentation, juxtaposition, varying lengths, disparate forms (observation, anecdote, journal, catalog, … and a hybrid text), and an organizing subject—it creates an impression of spontaneity and a quality of “imperfection.”
https://aaww.org/notes-on-zuihitsu/


These are chilling times indeed. Nice write.
ReplyDeleteThanks for yout appreciation, Christopher
DeleteMuch love
Why? Why? Indeed! Greed. "Casually, causalities increase." Yes to this, Gillena!
ReplyDeleteThanks for your appreciation, Merril
ReplyDeleteMuch love
Very well done, Gilleana!
ReplyDeleteThanks for your appreciation, Dwight
DeleteMuch love
Bombs and guns and war are bad news. Sharing is the best option.
ReplyDeleteThanks for your appreciation, Grace
ReplyDeleteMuch love
Your poem reminds us what matters in life - Jae
ReplyDeleteThanks for your appreciation, Jae
DeleteMuch love
We can’t help but think about what’s going on, about the ‘guy across the ocean’, Gillena. Your question at the end of your poem is on all our lips.
ReplyDeleteThanks for your appreciation, Kim
DeleteMuch love
Why, why? indeed! "Is sharing never an option?" Oh, how these questions make us ache...
ReplyDeleteThanks for your appreciation, Lynn
DeleteMuch love
Too true!
ReplyDeleteThanks for your appreciation, Rosemary
DeleteMuch love
Pitiful, a reality! The brush is allowed to flow freely at a high cost to human life
ReplyDeleteThanks for your appreciation, Hank
ReplyDeleteMuch love
well done truth, Gillena!
ReplyDeleteThanks for your appreciation, Sara
ReplyDeleteMuch love
Reminds me of what I picked up from my children’s preschool, “sharing is caring.”
ReplyDeleteThanks for your appreciation, Melissa
ReplyDeleteMuch love