Tag Archives: war

They’ve got the guns. They’re ready to scream.


They've got the guns. They're ready to scream. A poem on nonviolence.

A poem about nonviolence.

They’ve got the guns.

They’re ready to scream.

I go deeper into my mind.

It sets me free.

I’m ready.

Strike me.

– +positive masters+, Jon Riki Karamatsu, Poem, 12/18/2019 –

Go to +positive masters+ at www.positivemasters.com for mindset practices, motivational writing, and apparel with inspirational mantras and designs to boost your happiness and counter any stress, anxiety, sadness, or anger that you may be facing. ❤️

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We Burn Much Hotter


Bombs fall around us.

You hold me. It’s not scary.

We burn much hotter.

– Jon Riki Karamatsu, Haiku Poem #162, 9/23/2018 –

#haiku #haikupoem #haikupoetry #poem #poetry #art #creativewriting #writing

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War Tore Me Apart


War tore me apart.

Anger took over my heart,

until I met you.

– Jon Riki Karamatsu, 11/19/2016, Haiku #33 –

[My 2nd novel that I’m working on inspired me to write this Haiku poem.]

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Sadako Sasaki and All Children Affected By War


As I write my 2nd writing project, a fictional story with Sadako Sasaki and all children affected by war in mind, I reflect on how precious life is and the innocence of every child. I think of my two-year-old niece Elyse and four-month-old niece Sophie. I can’t help but feel sad inside.

On August 6, 1945, the United States dropped the atomic bomb on Hiroshima city when Sadako Sasaki was only two years old. She was blown out of the window of her home, and her mother found her lying on the ground. Her mother helped her and her four-year-old brother flee to a nearby river to escape the fire, where they huddled together as the “black rain” poured on them, the residual radioactive material that was propelled into the upper atmosphere following the nuclear blast and fell out of the sky with rain water after the shockwave. When Sadako was twelve years old, she was diagnosed with leukemia as a result of the bomb’s radiation. With determination to live, she folded paper cranes, but sadly the disease took her away.

I dedicate the song below called “Tracking Aeroplanes” by The Echelon Effect to all the children suffering or taken away to soon by war. The music expresses the deep feelings that I have inside. I feel so fortunate to be able to live this long, and to be able to play a small role in making this world better for the little ones.

Sadako Sasaki.

Sadako Sasaki.

Sadako Sasaki.

Sadako Sasaki.

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