Thursday, October 8, 2009

Never Say "Aloha"

A l o h a
to Each of
Y O U!



click on photos for pleasure
Indigenous Taiwanese Dancers TWIRL!


“Let us read and let us dance - two amusements
that will never do any harm to the world.”
Voltaire



“Put your hand on a hot stove for a minute, and it seems like an hour.
Sit with a pretty girl for an hour, and it seems like a minute.
THAT'S relativity.”
Albert Einstein


Spiral proclaiming itself!

Have you noticed it's infiltation of the culture?




"He drew a circle that shut me out --

Heretic, rebel, a thing to flout.

But love and I had the wit to win:

We drew a circle that took him in."

Edwin Markham





The Hawaiians of old
never said "Aloha"
by itself.





"Aloha Kakou - Love inclusive to all of us.
How are we all doing?"





"Aloha Kakahiaka Kakou -
How are we all
this morning?"





"Aloha Kaua - Aloha to we two;
how are we doing?"




Aloha is always inclusive and comprehensive.

<>< ><>





It is said that the Hawaiians of old
recognized a kindred spirit
in Jesus' words.




Thus adopting a Jewish brother
and their own religion
in "becoming"
Christian.





They forgave the gruff
and logical missionaries
who radiated condescension
and constraint.





The Hawaiians
in Christian patience
waited for them
to actually live
the religion they
professed.





Warmth & Inclusion to YOU, my friend.
How are WE today?

Cloudia

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

How to Become

A L O H A!


Waikiki Welcomes YOU-




click on photos to raise mojo
"Our pain doesn't come from the love we weren't given in the past, but from the love we ourselves aren't giving in the present. Salvation is only found in the present. Every moment we have the chance to change our past and our future by reprograming the present."




"We create what we defend against."



"We chose the patterns, however mistakenly, and He will not force us to give them up."
All quotes today: Mariane Williamson



Even though I lived through it, it still amazes me how completely my life has changed.



I find it breathtaking even now, how completely daily experiences mirror habitual thoughts. Shakespeare wrote that "Nothing is good or bad, but thinking makes it so." I have learned though hard experiment that this is merely a statement of bare fact.



Make no mistake.
It takes fearless commitment to face our thought habits.
They appear so self-evident, so obvious, that we never even notice them - they are the air we breathe: invisible.
We never stop to realize that there are alternative ways to respond to any situation. We keep responding the same way, over and over again, proclaiming: "That's just the way I am" all the while forgetting that it's just the way we've always been (up to now) as we keep hoping for a better outcome from our same in-put. "This time will be different," we tell oursleves, but somehow it never is.




Repeating nice affirmations will not help, if your gut is smirking and dis-affirming each one. We can not butt heads with habit. It's head is much, much harder. We must disrupt it's power through the unexpected. To change our energy, our responses, disguises us, and ultimately forges a new intentional identity.
Out of such mysterious change a space is created, where new growth can bring forth shoots. Soon it becomes beautifully clear how we daily experience pretty much what we expect to. You begin to comprehend the subtle cause & effect between your attitude, behavior and the world you inhabit. Change yourself, change the world. Think of the power in this! Expecially as more and more of us liberate ourselves from the "same old thing."




It turns out that people really do know subconsciously how you think and feel about them. We "read" each other all day long. Victims will find willing victimizers unerringly. This graciously presents each with the very opportunities each one needs to work through these issues along the way, and to make other choices. Once we thus come to become ourselves more deeply, we no longer require such lessons, and somehow they cease to show up in our life.




Seeing and being newness,
in ourselves and in our lives,
is the only way to change positively.



And don't forget that change is inevitable.




I have come to enjoy focusing on the daily bounty.
To me the inevitability of change, or endings, only makes today the more exhilarating and glittering. I no longer waste time fearing future, or lamenting the past. Either is a waste of time, a sacrilege in the face of glories too oft obscured by such unworthy considerations.




Attitudes and lives can change - just ask me: a former anxious depressive hanging on day to day. But a dragon guards this treasure's way. He holds a mirror, and only the courage to see yourself, and to grow, will get you past the fear.





A L O H A Friends, Cloudia

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Vertical Evacuation

A L O H A !
Welcome Back to Waikiki, Friend!
clickity click click click on the photos!Those hills would seem far away
if I was stuck in a panic traffic jam
trying to beat a tsunami inland!

"A timid person is frightened before a danger, a coward during the time, and a courageous person afterward."
Jean Paul Richter
Some might just give up and grab a Primo, Hawaii's beer.
But there is another solution.
Have you guessed it?



"Fortune does not change men, it unmasks them."
Suzanne Necker
Paddlers carrying their canoe. In the windshield glare it looks like
they are carrying a blur.



It's called "Vetical Evacuation."
Going above the third floor in a solid, modern building
should render one an observer (rather than a victim) of a
tsunami here in Waikiki.
Mom lives on the 20th floor (mountain side) of a cement pile called The Waikiki Banyon.
With modern warnings here in Hawaii,
there should be plenty of time for me to get up there
and to start bickering over the TV news channel to watch.


Of course, she'd have first call on the bathroom!


Meanwhile, our Hawaii Air National Guard has made numerous flights to Samoa bringing medicine, food, & supplies.

Look around you.
If your world is in Normal Chaos
instead of Disaster
count yourself Blessed.

Your visits are certainly a blessing to me!

Thank you, Friends.

A L O H A! Cloudia

Monday, October 5, 2009

Thank YOU Bloggers

A L O H A
Friends!
click-da-photo :)
Palm Shadow Path



“There are no foreign lands.
It is the traveler only who is foreign.”
Robert Louis Stevenson






Pink Pleasure




“Our battered suitcases were piled on the sidewalk again;
we had longer ways to go. But no matter, the road is life.”
Jack Kerouac





What's Over the Next Hill?
Ted Trimmer Photo



“A journey is like marriage.
The certain way to be wrong is to think you control it.”
John Steinbeck





“No one realizes how beautiful it is to travel
until he comes home
and rests his head on his old, familiar pillow.” –
Lin Yutang



Mahalo, Danke, Merci, Salamat, Kahmsamneda, Arrigato. . .




Thank YOU, Bloggers
for taking my far-seeking mind
winging around this world
to land in your own distinct neighborhoods.




You show me real life
that tourists never meet.
For I live in the Shangri la
of Hawaii's magic realm:
Waikiki,
and fear that-
should I leave-
some rift in reality,
terrorism,
financial collapse,
could prevent my homecoming;




So I remain here.
And should the cleft
of sky & sea
heal over,
I'll be safely here:
Sealed in Island intimacy.




So
Thanks EACH of You
for showing me
a world apart
of hearts
that are close.
A L O H A, Cloudia

Sunday, October 4, 2009

Recuperating From Saturday

A L O H A!
What a Saturday It Was!
You're gonna want to click on photos :) Lions Being Brought to Life! They are watching
the Dragon chase the pill of immortality.



This thrills me anytime, anywhere.
Happy Autumn Moon Festival.
But I'm getting ahead of myself. . .




Uusually I'm driving past.
But yesterday I had time to really LOOK
at Makiki Christian Church (See yesterday's post for info).






Why look at this ornate interior.


But the festival was outside; Here I come!



"It's no accident that the church and the graveyard stand side by side. The city of the dead sleeps encircled by the city of the living."
Diane Frolov and Andrew Schneider



These folks are proud to make Andagi (Japanese donuts)
just like grandma used to make.
They ran out early;
luckily I got one of the last bags :)



I didn't even know that the church had a courtyard,
but it was full of food &
fun yesterday!



"Cherish your own emotions and never undervalue them."
Robert Henri


Then I went to the Splendor of China Trade Show & Festival
just a few blocks away.


I was JUST in time to see the lions brought to life to dance and open the event. (Top photo)


Great timing again, blog girl!




















"There is nothing new under the sun
but there are lots of old things we don't know."
Ambrose Bierce

After which, I crossed King street to Thomas Square to
attend the InterTribal Pow Wow just in time to catch this
Wolf Dance by the Suquamish People of Alaska.





Your visit today is so very appreciated. . .
But I need to lay down for a while now.
L O L :)
A L O H A! Cloudia

Saturday, October 3, 2009

Satur-Crazy

ALOHA!
Welcome Back To Honolulu
click on photos - because you CAN
Makiki Christian Church
"I want freedom for the full expression of my personality."
Mahatma Gandhi







"It is unwise to be too sure of one's own wisdom.
It is healthy to be reminded that the strongest might weaken
and the wisest might err."
Mahatma Gandhi






"The weak can never forgive.
Forgiveness is the attribute of the strong."
Mahatma Gandhi



"Whatever you do will be insignificant,
but it is very important that you do it."
Mahatma Gandhi







What's a Honolulu obsessed gal like me supposed to do on a weekend like this one? Everything is happening all at once: too many treats, too little tummy.



Say: This is good practice for Halloween!







There's an "Autumn in Honolulu" buzz that started humming on Thursday with the opening of our first Victoria's Secret! The lines around the mall, and gushing local TV coverage were actually kind of sweet. But I needed to save myself for today.







The Daughters of Hawaii were founded in 1903. One must have a documented ancestor who resided in Hawaii circa 1880 to be a Daughter. These ladies "preserve the culture, history & language" of our Isles. And today they hold their big, public fundraiser of the year, the 33rd Annual Day at Queen Emma's Summer Palace in the cool uplands of Nu'uanu. This historic summer home of King Kamehameha IV and Queen Emma (from 1857 - 1885) is one of the properties that the Daughters administer, maintain, and share with the public. Queen Emma was the first Hawaiian Queen to visit the White House. She also met Queen Victoria who said of her: "Nothing could be nicer or more dignified than her manner." This is the lady who started our Queens Hospital too.


Queens Hospital:








Daughters of Hawaii:


http://kgmb9.com/main/content/view/21610/108/





Food, island crafts, Displays of historic Victoriana & Hawaiiana, and the best local entertainment, from 9:00 am-5:00. Pace yourself, girl!








. . . Because the historic Makikiki Christian Church is having their


Fall Festival today too, a celebration by members of both the Japanese and English language ministries. Built in 1932, the building (one of my local favorites!) resembles Kochi Castle in Japan's Shikoku Prefecture, the home of church founder Reverend Okamura. Look for the two golden dolphins dancing atop the castle tower, Christian symbols known in feudal Japan. Rev. Okamura ministered to the Japanese immigrants who came in the late 19th century to work on the sugar plantations, especially as they found their way to jobs and small businesses here in town. 8:30am - 1pm. . .





A few blocks away at the Blaisdell, The Chinese Chamber of Commerce of Hawaii,and Panda Express, proudly present the 61st Narcissus Festival's Splendor of China boasting:
• 130 Booths – Shop, Eat, & Enjoy Interactive Cultural Exhibits

• Narcissus Queen Contestants Debut




• Keiki Corner



• Chinese Dog Show



• Acrobatic Pole Lion Dance



• 2010 Shanghai World Expo Display.





Historic 200 Photo Exhibit –"30 Years of China-US Relations"



PLUS:



  • World Famous QiGong Grand Master Tu from Taiwan

  • Beijing Acrobatic Dancers from Heartbeat Hawaii

  • World Famous Chinese Folk Singers

  • How Could I Miss All That ????!!!!


But how can I do all this AND make it to Hawaii Pacific Islands Kava Festival at the University of Hawaii too? I think I'm gonna need that slightly narcotic, traditional Pacific drink that the Hawaiians called "Awa" to unwind after all my globe trotting and time shifting. I don't see how I can do ALL this, and STILL make it to the opening ceremonies of Filipino American History Month at the main branch, Hawaii State Library at 1:30pm!





Glad I made it an early evening at last night's monthly First Friday gallery walk and pub crawl down in Chinatown!





Should I survive, you may expect to see a collage of interesting and disjointed photos over the next week. It's a tough gig, but somebody has to do it. . .



I mean (of course) Walking in Waikiki. . .







ALOHA, Friends! Cloudia

Friday, October 2, 2009

Talofa Tonga

Talofa Means Aloha
in Samoa & Tonga-



TODAY,
Our hearts are with those isles
as many of our Honolulu neighbors wait to hear about family "back home."






The first military relief flights that reached Pago Pago today took off from right here at Honolulu's Hickam Air Force Base. A Significant portion of the crew are Americans of Samoan ethnicity on a double mission: to do their military duty, and to search for family.



In the 1990 census of the United States, over 55,000 Americans reported themselves to be of Samoan descent. Approximately 26,000 of the respondents resided in California, with another 15,000 in Hawaii, and 2,000 in Utah. But the influence of Samoan Americans has spread far beyond these limited regions.



The contributions made by Samoan Americans have been many and diverse; From courage and legendary valor in the US military during the Korean conflict and the Vietnam war (to today), to prowess on the athletic field that has brought much well earned recognition for Samoan Americans in college and professional football.



Samoan culture is sophisticated, exemplified by rhetorical skills, which are considerable. Samoan villages are complex in their structure, with different levels of matai, or chiefs.
(Yes, the drink was named for them)
Villagers are related in various complex ways
through common descent groups.



The involvement of small numbers of immigrant Samoan youth in gang activity has led some to dismiss all young Samoan Americans as hoodlums. But most Samoans and Tongans are people of deep faith, as the growing number of their churches attests. My own anxieties around illness and death have been lightened considerably by their attitude & example of deep gratitude and resignation in such matters. At the end, everyone gathers to join in wonderful (loud!) choral singing. Gospel music has a whole new voice!




Since most things & resources are shared by the entire family group, it is considered selfish to keep everything you earn for your own "nuclear" family. This can create psychological conflict for Islanders assimilating into western type cultures like the US and New Zealand.
They are very generous to their churches.





The Samoan islands were colonized between 500 and 800 B.C. by an oceanic people distinguished by their production of Lapita pottery—a unique pottery form named after one of the original sites of pottery shard discovery in Melanesia. Based on archaeological, botanical, and linguistic evidence, it seems almost certain that the ancestors of the Samoans originated in Indo-Malaysia, spent several centuries living along coastal areas of New Guinea, and then colonized Samoa and Tonga.


Over time the descendants of these original immigrants colonized other regions, including Tahiti and other areas of eastern Polynesia, the Marquesas, Hawaii, and New Zealand.



Western awareness of Samoa grew over time due to its proximity to southern whaling grounds and the unparalleled harbor of Pago Pago. In 1857 a German firm greatly expanded the copra trade, establishing a regional center in Samoa. This led to the establishment of a German consulate in 1861. This increased interest in Samoa created significant tensions between the colonial powers. Samoa was finally partitioned between the east (Eastern Samoa) and the west (German Samoa) during the 1880s.





American Samoa was eventually ceded by the chiefs of Tutuila and Manu'a to the United States and administered by the Department of the Navy as a U.S. territory. The region was largely forgotten until the 1960s, under President John F. Kennedy who had served in the South Pacific during WWII. During the 1960s and 1970s construction on American Samoa increased dramatically. Elections now determine the territorial governor, a position previously filled by appointment from Washington, D.C.
Tuna canning has been a major employer.





Western Samoa changed hands from German ownership to New Zealand administration during the First World War after a bloodless invasion.


Jacob Roggeveen, the first European to discover Samoa, happened upon the islands in 1722 during his ill-fated voyage from the Netherlands to New Ireland.



Today's Honolulu mayor is Mufi Hanneman, a Harvard educated song bird of Samoan ethnicity. (Get call waiting when you phone the City, and you will hear him singing!)
The mayor's brother, Gus, called a meeting of Samoan comunity leaders to Honolulu Hale (City Hall) yesterday in order to organize prayer and relief efforts. I was once at a smallish event where Da Mayor spoke with evident feeling about seeing the names of his chiefly family members on the historic treaties kept in Harvard's library collection.



Let's face it, growing up in America in the 50s, 60's & 70s one never saw an Asian, person of color, or even overtly ethnic person unless it was part of the plot or setting. The US was called a "melting pot" - which meant "Everyone try to pass as culturally English/American."




But living in Hawaii gives us the opportunity to interact with others with a certain Esprit Des Isles that gets us past stereotyping (well, except for island humour that teases us all, from the talkative Portugee, to the Filipino who can't be an HPD detective because he cannot wear plain clothes, to the "thrifty" Chinese, to the clueless Haole in the ugly Aloha shirt).




One of the heroes of my little novel, Aloha Where You Like Go? was Fia the taxi yard boss. That character is based on a man who was a very kind mentor to a certain clueless young haole wahine , and who taught ME da Honolulu taxi business many years ago when I needed the job. When a dignified Tongan boss tell your husband that you are "one hard worker" well, that remark (from HIM) meant as much to me as my college degree. Maybe I'm even prouder of it.




So Talofa Tonga, Samoa, and Indonesia today as you struggle with the instant emergency of earthquake and tsunami. I know that you are resilient folks with great heart - and hearts very dear to God.



And thanks to each of
YOU
who stopped by today.
Warm ALOHA/Talofa cloudia