Curator's Note
We started around four years ago, and since then Davin Carr-Chellman, Amy Hoppock, and I have been writing and sharing haiku's monthly with each other. It has been an enriching and enjoyable way to develop our individual haiku writing practices.
It goes like this
Each person shares a haiku they have written with each other. Usually, as you'll see below, we put them on cards or bookmarks which we can keep ourselves, and often make more to share with others. We either mail these to each other (how nice to get a haiku, hand-addressed, in the mail!) or send them electronically. We each then write a narrative response to each other's haiku, including our own, and then we get together to share our responses. The poet reads their own haiku, the others read their responses to it, and then the author reads their own narrative about it. In that way, we independently think about each haiku and then learn from each other.
Our first meeting to share haikus in this way was in September, 2019.
How about that!
It is a lot of fun!
We enjoy doing this so much we thought you might enjoy being a part of the conversation as well, so we started recording them in May, 2020, and had been exchanging and discussing our haikus each month for nearly a year before that. If you watch the clip here, you will see our discussions are very informal and that we laugh a lot.
This is our Fortieth (four-zero, 40) recording (You can watch them all here. I'll stop counting once we hit 50 or something like that), and we hope to continue. Please let us know what you think, and share this with anyone you think might benefit.
We are very excited about our book, Framing the Moment: Haiku Conversations. Here is a short description and video describing how and why we created the book, and how to order one or more.
My family is the most important part of who I am. Asher, Jules,
and Aila are my three wonderful children (Davin and Jules
pictured here), and Ali is my amazing wife of 25 years.
I serve as Professor of Education at the University of
Dayton and am lucky to have found employment at two other
equally remarkable universities along the way: Penn State and the
University of Idaho. My work as a faculty member, educator, and
researcher is a labor of love. It is generative, life-giving work,
primarily from the collaborative colleagues and students who
help me.
I am co-editor of Adult Learning, a research journal for anyone
studying or practicing adult education, and am Chair of the
Commission for Professors of Adult Education, a national
organization of the American Association of Adult and
Continuing Education.
I have edited or co-written four books, the most recent of which
is Step by Step: Living More Meaningfully, Joyfully, and Deeply Each Day, the second volume in the profound living series. I love
academic research and writing, most of which explores human
learning, potential, and flourishing. Regardless of the context, my
personal and professional ambition is always to be useful.
When I was in 2nd or 3rd grade, I wrote a poem recognized in a
Poetry contest for “ Young Authors,” so perhaps it was a foregone
conclusion that decades later, I would find myself writing haiku
and putting words in books!
I’m a Spiritual Director in Training (I’ll be certified in late 2022).
It’s something I was made to do.
If you ever need a good book suggestion, I’m your gal. I read 60-80
books each year. I read everything from spiritual formation, World
War II novels, murder mysteries, and books on trees.
I’m Jack and Cindy’s daughter, Todd’s wife, Reid, and Delana’s
mama. They support all my crazy ideas and questions. I couldn’t
be more blessed.
P.S. I write a newsletter every Sunday. It’s called Smaller &
Deeper. What if smaller was the goal? What if deeper was the
invitation?
Join the newsletter list at:
https://amyhoppock.substack.com/about
Michael Kroth is Professor of Education in the Adult,
Organizational Learning, and Leadership program at the
University of Idaho in Boise. He has written or coauthored nine
books.
Michael curates and writes for Profound Living with Michael
Kroth (www.profoundliving.live), an online site with essays,
photos, and poetry dedicated to contemplating what it means
to have a profound life.
Michael has been married for 45 years to his wife, Lana. Piper
and Shane are their cherished children. Grayson (Piper’s son),
and Alex and Madison (the children of Shane and his wife, Lisa)
are their dearly loved grandchildren. Tinkerbell and Shelby (in spirit, now), two rescue-pups-turned-dearly-beloved family members, round out Michael and
Lana’s household in Boise, Idaho.
Profound Living Copyright © 2019 by Michael Kroth.
All Rights Reserved.
Individual contributors to this site retain all rights to their own original work.
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