HAIKU DIALOGUE – Intoxication – Alcohol
Intoxication with Guest Editor Deborah Karl-Brandt
It has been with us since time immemorial, and almost all of us have experienced it firsthand: intoxication. Endorphins produced in the body during exercise give us a feeling of happiness known as a “runner’s high,” and once again we are intoxicated. Intoxicants have been used to awaken our spirituality, make us forget physical hardships, or elevate our imagination to unprecedented heights. And yet intoxication has its dark side. In the coming weeks, we want to explore how legal intoxicants affect us, our brains, and our everyday lives. I invite you to join me on a journey into our everyday lives and our brains to explore intoxication.
Prompt: Alcohol
Made from wheat, rice, berries, or grapes. The ancient Egyptians were already familiar with the joys of beer, and rice wine was probably invented in China four thousand years ago. We have known about its intoxicating effects for just as long. We feel good, relaxed, elated, and cheerful. The next morning, our head hurts, the birds are singing too loudly, and the light is much too bright. The monster called a hangover has caught up with us. Whether it’s a glass of champagne on New Year’s Eve, a beer after work, or a cocktail at a party, drinking is part of life.
We drink alone or in company, we drink to feel our emotions or to numb them, to forget or to remember, or even in a religious context. Maybe we have never had a glass of wine or any other kind of alcohol. It is not easy to remain abstinent in a society where alcohol consumption is the norm. People will talk. About drinking too much or not drinking at all. Today we want to write about all aspects of alcohol consumption. I look forward to reading your poems!
The deadline is midnight Eastern Daylight Time, Saturday, June 13, 2026.
Please use the Haiku Dialogue submission form below to enter one or two original unpublished haiku inspired by the week’s theme, and then press Submit to send your entry. (The Submit button will not be available until the Name, Email, and Place of Residence fields are filled in.) In the Poem box, with your poem(s), please include any special formatting requirements & your name & residence as you would like it to appear in the column. Please note that by submitting, you agree that your work may appear in the column – neither acknowledgment nor acceptance emails will be sent. All communication about the poems that are posted in the column will be added as blog comments.
Join us next week for Deborah’s selection of poems on the topic of Alcohol…
Bios
Guest Editor Deborah Karl-Brandt lives in Sinzig, Germany, with her husband, two rabbits and numerous books. After her PhD studies in Scandinavian languages and literatures, she works as a freelance author and poet. Her poems have appeared in magazines like Prune Juice, Kingfisher, First Frost, Frogpond, Failed Haiku and Tsuridoro. If she is not outside for a long stroll or to do some birdwatching, she explores Chinese and Japanese novels.
Assistant Editor Lafcadio, a former teacher, now works from home writing, editing and proofreading study guides for nursing textbooks. She lives in Tennessee. She has written poetry for a long time but a couple of years ago fell in love with Japanese micropoetry and hasn’t looked back. Lafcadio has been published in a number of journals and anthologies. She writes under the nom de plume of Lafcadio because nom de plume is so fun to say. You can read her poems on Twitter (X) @lafcadiopoetry or BlueSky @lafcadiobsky.
Assistant Editor Vandana Parashar is an associate editor of haikuKATHA and one of the editors of Poetry Pea and #FemkuMag. Her debut e-chapbook, I Am, was published by Title IX Press (now Moth Orchid Press) in 2019 and her second chapbook Alone, I Am Not, was published by Velvet Dusk Publishing in April 2022.
Lori Zajkowski is the Post Manager for Haiku Dialogue. She lives in New York City and enjoys reading and writing haiku.
Managing Editor Katherine Munro lives in Whitehorse, Yukon Territory, and publishes under the name kjmunro. She served as Membership Secretary for Haiku Canada for ten years, and her debut poetry collection is contractions (Red Moon Press, 2019). Find her at: kjmunro1560.wordpress.com.
Portrait by Laurel Parry
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Banner Photo credit: Andreas Brandt
Haiku Dialogue offers a triweekly prompt for practicing your haiku. Posts appear each Wednesday with a prompt or a selection of poems from a previous week. Read past Haiku Dialogue posts here.


Deborah sorry I think one of my two haiku may have been sent more than once as I had not received acknowledgement initially. May have even gone to spam. Request you to kindly check.
Sudha Devi Nayak – both poems have been received – thanks for your submission! kj