Aloha!
it's
Wednesday
in
H O N O L U L U
clickity click click!
it's
Wednesday
in
H O N O L U L U
clickity click click!
"Do not regret growing older. It is a privilege denied to many."
Anonymous
Anonymous
"I watched a small man with thick calluses on both hands work 15 and 16 hours a day.
I saw him once literally bleed from the bottoms of his feet,
a man who came here uneducated, alone, unable to speak the language,
who taught me all I needed to know about faith and hard work
by the simple eloquence of his example."
Mario Cuomo
I saw him once literally bleed from the bottoms of his feet,
a man who came here uneducated, alone, unable to speak the language,
who taught me all I needed to know about faith and hard work
by the simple eloquence of his example."
Mario Cuomo
- "The perfect man uses his mind as a mirror.
It grasps nothing. It regrets nothing.
It receives but does not keep."
><>
Although I enjoy walking in Waikiki, there are many other wonderful areas of our town that reward a thoughtful perambulator.
One such is the stretch of South King Street between Keeaumoku & Kalakaua. Formerly the path taken by the King from old Honolulu down to "suburban" Waikiki, King Street grew and developed along with the plantation generations as they moved from the fields to shops, small business and snug bungalow homes of their own in the nearby villages of Paawa and Mo`ili`ili.
Today, most stores and businesses have migrated to the malls and such, but this corridor still boasts small family restaurants, mom & pop shops, and doctor's offices featuring old-fashioned "American" first names with Chinese and Japanese last names (Clarence Wong MD). This area is like a museum of Honolulu's working-class-American-Dream 20th Century, now in it's twilight. Many of the physicians are as old (or older!) than their patients and these practices are unlikely to survive their founders as the younger generations join HMOs. Same trend with the little shops, restaurants and businesses. More and more Hangul (Korean alphabet) signs are seen spreading out from Keeaumoku's Korean nexus as new immigrants replace the old.
I love everything that makes our town unique, and most special is our people. In Waikiki one sees faces from all over the world. Every generation and human condition is represented. But stroll along King Street on a sunny weekday early afternoon and you will be among the local elderly. The people who built the Hawaii of today, who fought both WWII and discrimination, are now leaning on canes and waiting at the bus stop. The pulse of Honolulu's life has moved towards upscale condos, tourism, & retail. Meanwhile, the low-rise store-front blocks, and modest, aging professional buildings of South King Street host hustling entrepreneurs and immigrant dreamers as they wait for whatever may be coming next.
Elegy and expectation walk arm in arm along King Street as the traffic hurries past towards the University, Waikiki, upscale Kahala Mall, and growing residential Hawaii Kai where the last small farms and nurseries face down developers at the end of the road, where the wild Ko`olau Mountain foothills seem to recede with our past.
Walking down Kalakaua Avenue back towards Waikiki I had a sudden "local style" hankering for Shrimp Chips. How long has it been since my tongue stuck to a puffy shrimp chip as it changed in my mouth like "Pop Rocks?" Little by little, the small unique things that used to define us become submerged in a sea of Frito-Lay and Whole Foods house brands.
I stopped into the tiniest mom & pop you can imagine, right behind kupuna (elders) and teens waiting at the bus stop. One bag left. I thanked the woman in my best Korean: "Kahm Sahm Ne Dah."
Soon after, I bought some take-out jerk chicken from the "new" Jamaican lunch truck across Kapiolani Boulevard from the Hawaii Convention Center. But tomorrow (I promised myself) I'll go to a hole-in-the-wall for a local plate lunch with two scoops rice, macaroni salad, mochiko chicken, lau lau, and cone sushi - all the local stuff we like eat. . . before there's nothing left but fast food and chic cafe`s.
Ono da kine!
(Delicious, that's the kind!)
One such is the stretch of South King Street between Keeaumoku & Kalakaua. Formerly the path taken by the King from old Honolulu down to "suburban" Waikiki, King Street grew and developed along with the plantation generations as they moved from the fields to shops, small business and snug bungalow homes of their own in the nearby villages of Paawa and Mo`ili`ili.
Today, most stores and businesses have migrated to the malls and such, but this corridor still boasts small family restaurants, mom & pop shops, and doctor's offices featuring old-fashioned "American" first names with Chinese and Japanese last names (Clarence Wong MD). This area is like a museum of Honolulu's working-class-American-Dream 20th Century, now in it's twilight. Many of the physicians are as old (or older!) than their patients and these practices are unlikely to survive their founders as the younger generations join HMOs. Same trend with the little shops, restaurants and businesses. More and more Hangul (Korean alphabet) signs are seen spreading out from Keeaumoku's Korean nexus as new immigrants replace the old.
I love everything that makes our town unique, and most special is our people. In Waikiki one sees faces from all over the world. Every generation and human condition is represented. But stroll along King Street on a sunny weekday early afternoon and you will be among the local elderly. The people who built the Hawaii of today, who fought both WWII and discrimination, are now leaning on canes and waiting at the bus stop. The pulse of Honolulu's life has moved towards upscale condos, tourism, & retail. Meanwhile, the low-rise store-front blocks, and modest, aging professional buildings of South King Street host hustling entrepreneurs and immigrant dreamers as they wait for whatever may be coming next.
Elegy and expectation walk arm in arm along King Street as the traffic hurries past towards the University, Waikiki, upscale Kahala Mall, and growing residential Hawaii Kai where the last small farms and nurseries face down developers at the end of the road, where the wild Ko`olau Mountain foothills seem to recede with our past.
Walking down Kalakaua Avenue back towards Waikiki I had a sudden "local style" hankering for Shrimp Chips. How long has it been since my tongue stuck to a puffy shrimp chip as it changed in my mouth like "Pop Rocks?" Little by little, the small unique things that used to define us become submerged in a sea of Frito-Lay and Whole Foods house brands.
I stopped into the tiniest mom & pop you can imagine, right behind kupuna (elders) and teens waiting at the bus stop. One bag left. I thanked the woman in my best Korean: "Kahm Sahm Ne Dah."
Soon after, I bought some take-out jerk chicken from the "new" Jamaican lunch truck across Kapiolani Boulevard from the Hawaii Convention Center. But tomorrow (I promised myself) I'll go to a hole-in-the-wall for a local plate lunch with two scoops rice, macaroni salad, mochiko chicken, lau lau, and cone sushi - all the local stuff we like eat. . . before there's nothing left but fast food and chic cafe`s.
Ono da kine!
(Delicious, that's the kind!)
PS: Best selling novelist Alan Brennert (read my review of his wonderful MOLOKAI here) quoted me (of all people) in a recent interview and then e-mailed me about it!
Read it here
Cool! ALOHA, cloudia
Read it here
Cool! ALOHA, cloudia
24 comments:
Yes, Cloudia -- you are "Hawai'i True!"
Gosh, the Aunties are eating bowls of poi, even in the upscale restaurant. Culture survives the fancy version...
DrumMajor
Now, you've gotten me hankering for shrimp chips. It's been years...
Hi Cloudia! lovely post. The Aunties look gorgeous...
Time to relax with a visit to a museum? Blogtrotter is at the British! Enjoy and have a great holiday season!
Lovely images for me to see here in a bitterly cold and icy UK. Happy Christmas Cloudia.
Be wonderful on this another fine day in the land at rainbow's beginning.
oOoo, your fame is spreading! Yay! I've got to say, though, that book reviewers are a questionable lot! *smirk*
merry xmas!
Lovely post Cloudia.
I just want to take this opportunity to wish you and your family a Very Happy Christmas and a Healthy and Happy New Year. xx
Lovely to see your warm pics Cloudia and not all the ice and snow we have here... Happy Christmas to you !
Lovely post, as always. I love the photo of The Aunties! Much of what you say about your town is what makes any place truly special - its people and its traditions. Love it.
Congrats on the mention from the famous novelist! Way to go, Cloudy!
da aunties are eating poi, indeed (I enlarged the picture). Expensive stuff.
Oh those Aunties look so lovely .. Merry Christmas to you all!
Ok I want one of those hats!
<><
Have a very merry Christmas and a happy New Year. :)
I have enjoyed walking in civilized areas when there are a lot of little shops and stuff, and food. Most of the time I prefer the woods though.
Cool about getting the response from the author. Excellent.
I love the aunties!
how cool that you were quoted
very aloha
cj
As your writing makes many times the way of thorns wear roses it is much deserved, maybe even late, to be discovered.
Please have a blessed Christmas you all.
VERY NICE
"Hawai'i True" - how true! Your take on Hawaii is one that always brings me back here because it is in your blog that I get a feel for the 'real'Hawaii. Those plate lunches were one of our special treats while visiting the islands. We looked forward to them like a couple of kids. Great post, great photos, great quotes.
Thanks for the walkabout. I loved it. It's nice to find these places that remain true, real.
The Mario Cuomo quote made my day. Thanks.
MERRY CHRISTMAS ! Cloudia
Aloha !
Thanks for the lovely 'tour'.As always, lovely photos with interesting.
Happy holidays to you and to your family. A blessed day to everyone.
I love you folks!!!
Post a Comment