Catchment – Voices. Poetry of Place 5th edition

Catchment – Poetry of Place

Exciting news 5 of my tanka are going to be read on the radio. from February  2026.

Greetings, Colleen.

We are proud to have chosen the following poetry of yours for recorded readings, within our latest initiative, Tanka Tones:

 – ‘Changi’
 – ‘walking the beach’
 – ‘an empty sky’
 – ‘in Shiki’s garden’

After recording & editing, we will start making postings online on the 14th & 28th days of each month

Nine Streams of selected tanka will be released in total.

At present, we envisage commencing in February, but will advise you subsequently about specific dates.

To be presented by a team of six readers, in rotation, readings will go live in sets of four.

Previous postings will be readily available, archived immediately below – as with all releases through Catchment, access will be free, with no subscription/ fee payable.

This project follows closely in the footsteps of Catchment Voices, likewise produced through 3BBR-FM: again, a proportion of audio files from Tanka Tones will also be broadcast on local community radio, in West Gippsland, Victoria.

As members of the Catchment team, we are grateful to Paul Strickland from 3BBR for his backing, while also thanking you for your support: we hope you will feel we have done justice to your writing within Tanka Tones.

Looking forward to receiving further submissions from you in future, we wish you all the very best for the year to come!

Cheers,

 Rodney Williams
 Editor
 Catchment – Poetry of Place
Baw Baw Arts Alliance
Gunaikurnai country

Memorial for Monica author of Blotch

 

Our gift

for Monica

These words are a song of celebration
not of lament 
In this room with Monica 
there is only room for joy

Swathed in colours of life 
she was Monica
her bright cheerful loving face 
a spark lighting up our world

Her tools in our years together
were words and writing books 
and determination to see them 
into the hands of children.

Bright and happy swathed 
in her white furry costume  
she was Blotch the dog
Blotch who wanted to see the world

getting smuggled onto a plane
to have an adventure 
in her beloved Chile

Her horizons were always hopeful 
for Monica the clouds were promising 
shade if it was too hot 
rain if it was too dry 
comforting when times were hard  or sad.

Monica  your unabashed enthusiasm 
was translucent
your love and pride in family 
your cheery loving phone calls and sad ones.
your welcoming arms wrapped around me
your greeting always as if for the first time

Little was I to know one of those was the last.
My symphonic friend of joy 
we had a blast  in our writing days 
Thank you for you. 

Colleen

 

The venue was stunning. Monica would ve loved it.

 

Happy Days  We had a blast 

     

 

DAY OF MOURNING   22 nd January 2026 ~~~Light will Win ~~~

DAY OF MOURNING  Sydney  JANUARY 22 nd  2026.

 

“Et lux in tenebris lucet, et tenebrae eam non comprehenderunt.

“”The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness has not seized it.”  Mozart

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“Darkness cannot drive out darkness; only light can do that.”  Martin Luther King

 

“The sun never says”

— Hafez (Khājeh Shams-od-Dīn Moḥammad Ḥāfeẓ-e Shīrāzī), Persia (c.1325-1390)

Even after all this time
the sun never says to the earth,
“You owe me.”

Look what happens
with a love like that –
It lights the whole world!



Thank you to Dr.Stephanie Dowrick 
for her New Year initiative of the poetry and photography. 

Hafez Shirazi (1325–1390) was a 14th century Persian poet. Persian .

He is regarded by Iranians as one of the highest pinnacles of Persian Literature.

His works are often found in the homes of Persain speakers who learn the poems by heart

over the centuries and use them as everyday proverbs and sayings. 

 

Our candle from Darkinjung land
while on holidays.

Mitzvah is an act of kindness, compassion and a moral responsibility. 

A simple act of kindness.

Fifteen suggested Mitzvah for the 15 people lost in the Bondi attack

  1. Give to others – donate to organisations in service of others.
  2. Uplift the sick – visit someone who is unwell and offer support.
  3. Help those who have helped you – perform one small task to help your parent or older relative.
  4. Open your home – offer hospitality to someone you may not have thought to.
  5. Travel with care – help those needing transport, treat the roads and drivers with respect.
  6. Act with intent – reflect with a moment of silence to seek guidance and clarity before beginning a task.
  7. Prioritise family – spend the first hour of your evening dedicated to your family, screen-free.
  8. Gratitude first – begin your day with thanks for the good things surrounding you.
  9. Prayer for healing – say a prayer for the complete physical and spiritual recovery for the victims of the Bondi massacre.
  10. Work with integrity – give the time you committed to the tasks you committed to.
  11. Pay it forward – When someone wants to repay you for an act of kindness, encourage them to ‘pay it forward’ to a stranger instead.
  12. Cherish your partner and friend – remind those you love every day how grateful you are for all they do for you.
  13. Kindness without expecting anything in return – Quietly perform an act of kindness to brighten someone else’s day.
  14. Teach children – read children stories that show them all the good in the world.
  15. Legacy of life – empower the next generation to carry forward not with loss but with hope.

 

 

 

Welcome 2026 It is our year to live by Colleen Keating

Welcome .  It is our year . We live it . We breathe  it. We think  it. We respond. to it  . We act  in it.

A new dawn , a new day, a new year and a new beginning.

From an Old Master   –   Repeat every morning again and again and the way your body responds, feels and lives will begin to change.

This is going to be the best day of my life.  (Not because it will be perfect but because I will turn up fully present and willing

to learn from what even the day begins)

I control my mind – it does not control me. (I do not control what will happen but I control how I respond  and I choose to respond with joy and love to whatever happens )

I am grateful for what I have right now.  (even if it is something small, even if the day is not perfect)

Repeat every morning again and again and the way your body responds, feels and lives will begin to change.

 

A Celtic Tradition from Anam Cara An idea to live by. Colleen Keating

“There is a lovely idea in the Celtic tradition that if you send out goodness from yourself, or if you share
that which is happy or good within you, it will all come back to you multiplied ten thousand times.
In the kingdom of love there is no competition, there is no possessiveness or control.
The more love you give away, the more love you will have.” 💚
-Anam Cara
John O’Donohue died #otd 4 January 2008