Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Look Up Look Down

Aloha!


Hawaii State Federal Credit Union, Kaneohe

Look Up!



"I place a high moral value on the way people behave.
 I find it repellent to have a lot,
 and to behave with anything other than courtesy
 in the old sense of the word - 
politeness of the heart, a gentleness of the spirit."

Fran Lebowitz 





Scooter Gal
Look Down!


"A human being
 is only breath and shadow."

Sophocles 




Look all around!



"If you are a dog 
and your owner suggests that you wear a sweater
 suggest that he wear a tail."

Fran Lebowitz 





When you get here, pause and reflect!




"Nature is by and large to be found out of doors,
 a location where, it cannot be argued,
 there are never enough comfortable chairs."

Fran Lebowitz
 



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Thanks for visiting :)
Please leave a "hello"
    in comments.  cloudia

Sunday, November 21, 2010

Any Child Can Grow Up to Be

Aloha!



"Each week, from a different point of view, 
you get another look at God,
 and that's exciting to me."

Della Reese 


Do you recognize the couple from the 1960's?



"You know that being an American
 is more than a matter of where your parents came from.
 It is a belief that all men are created free and equal
 and that everyone deserves an even break."

US President Harry S. Truman 






Here is the same woman with their son.


"I remember my mother's prayers
 and they have always followed me. 
 They have clung to me all my life. "

Abraham Lincoln


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Middle Photo: Stanley Anne Dunham,
 and Barack Obama Senior.

Bottom Photo:
Stanley Anne and her son Barack





The University of Hawaii Foundation is forming an endowment fund that would honor the late Stanley Ann Dunham, President Barack Obama's mother.






The fund uses the name Ann Dunham Soetoro, which she adopted after marrying her second husband, Lolo Soetoro. She also used the name professionally during years of anthropology studies.




Obama was Dunham's first child, born in Hawaii to her and Barack Obama Sr., a UH student from Kenya.




 Dunham died in 1995.


Her second child and Obama's half-sister, Maya Soetoro-Ng, said in an interview Tuesday that her mother would have been moved to know that her work in the field of applied anthropology was being honored.



Dunham received a bachelor's degree in math, and a master's and doctorate in anthropology from UH.
During her travels to Indonesia and other parts of Asia, she worked with nongovernmental groups focused on women and poverty, and established microcredit programs in Indonesia and Pakistan.


Dunham concluded after years of studies in Indonesia that the roots of poverty there did not lay with the poor, and that cultural differences were responsible for the gap between less-developed countries and the industrialized West.
Her book, "Surviving against the Odds: Village Industry in Indonesia," centers on the metalworking industries in the Javanese village of Kajar and contends that rice cultivation was not the only viable economic activity in rural Southeast Asia, according to a description by its publisher, Duke University Press.



The endowment will support a professorship in the UH Anthropology Department that will focus on research and teaching on Southeast Asia. 
It also will finance one or more graduate fellowships for students studying anthropology or other social sciences. 

Courtesy: Honolulu Star Advertiser 19 NOV '10

Every parent touches the world through their children. . .
 Thanks for visiting today.
        Please leave a comment!   cloudia


Saturday, November 20, 2010

Silly Little Simplicity

Welcome to Honolulu

ALOHA  to  YOU


More Hawaiian Skies - Ho Hum



'Love is like a little old woman
 and a little old man
 who are still friends even after
 they know each other so well.'

Tommy - age 6






"At any street corner
 the feeling of absurdity
 can strike any man
 in the face."

Albert Camus 







"In order to understand the world,
 one has to turn away from it
 on occasion."

Albert Camus





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We like to sound smart.

And we think to do this
 by using big words,
many words,
jargon.

The most "intelligent" people
such as professors
and straight  "A" students
are the most guilty of this.

In the recent election
we voted on some amendments and such
that were SO impenetrable
that I could get but a general idea
what they were about,
let alone what specific choice
I needed to make.

And what about instruction booklets?
The people who wrote them
know what they mean to say
and it's just too bad
that it makes no logical sense
to us.

But it's not only jargon.

A whole 
"You know what I mean"
culture
has taken over broadcast journalism.


There is no longer even a pretense
of comprehensive
factual
news.
But there is a lot of giggling
cooking
and pets.

I like pets
but the News Greats
interpreted the world for us
instead of doing expose`
on the best place
to buy cupcakes.

The good news is:
Simplicity
&
Clarity
Stand Out.


Everyone's so used to sounding smart,
or entertaining,
that we have forgotten the power of a 
few simple words.

I hate you.


I love you.

Please stay.

I think that we over-intellectualise everything
to our hurt.

Religion is about thinking;

A life of faith is about feeling,
acting, and being.

Who cares what you call it?

Kindness
 is the universal language.

Gratitude is a big concept.
Let's have a conference about it.

I'll get sponsors
you book a hotel.
Clear your calendars
for one month, one year
from now.

Or better yet:
Stop thinking for just a moment.

Close your eyes.

Breathe.

Say out loud:

"Thank You for my life;
For this day."


If you do this daily
you will not write an essay about grattitude
you will begin living it.

Surprising stuff will occur.

Things will develop
and change
in most delightful
surprising ways.

I know.

I haven't been "thinking"
for quite some time now.

And I've never been happier.

Somehow my life has improved
instead of falling apart
as the ego threatens.


Weekends are a good time to start
it will feel strange at first;
stop being smart
and start allowing
wisdom.


Out of the mouths of babes

and bloggers. . . 

       Thanks for visiting. Please leave a comment! cloudia

Friday, November 19, 2010

Friday Sky Day

ALOHA!

Come Inside, Friend-



"Though we travel the world over to find the beautiful,
 we must carry it with us or we find it not."

 Emerson







 “Looking back
 you realize that a very special person
 passed briefly through your life-
 and it was you.
 It is not too late to find that person again.”

 Robert Brault 






"Nature gives you the face you have at twenty;
 it is up to you to merit the face you have at fifty." 
Coco Chanel 



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      Jesus, Buddha,
Hanuman,


didn't leave us
thick policy & procedure manuals.

They shared a few basic principles,
deceptive in their
simplicity. . .


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We had heavy rain
lightning
and rumbling thunder
last night while we slept.

The first winter storm
 rolled in from sea
and down the island chain
cutting off our brisk
Northeast Trades.

Volcanic smog,
VOG,
creeps towards us
from the Big Island
to the south east.
But it will not wreath us for long.


For many years
as I have grown older
magical Christmas Season
has receded to the weeks
around New Year.

But we must need a little of that
spirit right now,
or perhaps I'm living closer
to the love & fellowship
of the season
all year long?

Whatever the cause,
a Hanukkah glow,
 Diwali lights,
and Thanksgiving gratitude
are reflected everywhere
around me.

So share the spirit with me
if you wish.

Here is your first present:





          Thank YOU for visiting today, cloudia




Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Capitol Walk

Aloha & Welcome to Honolulu





A special place like Hawaii,
 needs a special capitol building,
 or so they believed in the 1960's.







Our capitol is open to the elements,
and to the people. On one side of this
courtyard is the Senate Chamber.
On the other: the House Chamber.
Their outside walls are sloping stone 
representing the volcanoes that are the 
bedrock of these Islands.











Outside, the building is set among pools of water:
the ocean that surrounds us;
 out of which
pillars representing palm trees
 rise to support the roof.

That 'framed' tower is Honolulu Hale,
our City Hall.  It looks Spanish, but is actually
based on a fortified Italian castle.






"The Life of the Land is Perpetuated in Righteousness"
 our motto.

The Hawaiian Language is our official language along with
English.  Interpreters of many flavors
 make a good living here though,
as we continue to attract folks from all over Asia,
 the Pacific,
and the World!





The offices are upstairs.  Lobbyists, staff, citizens,
 all hang out here by the railings
 where a lot of the REAL business of government is done.





You can see the State Flag
 flying in front of the building
 from these "corridors of power."
And the sky is always looking on,
putting things into perspective.
(one hopes :)




Looking down at the ground level
 yields a nice view of this watery mosaic.





Behind the capitol building,
 is our original government building:
Iolani Palace,
 built by Kalakaua for some three hundred thousand
dollars in the 19th Century.



All Done Up for a Festive Event.
Link to a Royal past and a troubled political history.


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A true tale is told (courtesy of the great Glen Grant)
of a government employee
who stayed late one evening
working at the new Capitol.

Her young daughter played in the halls just outside
as they waited for father to come
collect them for the ride home.

All the way home,
the little girl spoke excitedly about
playing with a nice lady
whose arms were draped in lei.

The mother had smelled flowers
& faint cigar smoke. She assumed it 
was a staffer or cleaner the girl spoke of.
Or perhaps it was childish imagination.

Weeks later, when the statue of
 Queen Liliuokalani 
between the two iconic 
buildings was unveiled,
Hawaiians present protested covering
Her neck piece (more HERE)
with lei, and so the statue's arms
were draped in dozens of flowery garlands.

"Mommy! That's the nice lady
who played with me!"
Squealed the little girl.

The Queen has been seen,
 the smell of flowers 
and her favored small cigars
left behind, many times since.


She is still looking out for Her
People.
And besides:
who would really want to leave
this fragrant & magic land?





As yesterday was King Kalakaua's 174th birthday,
Hawaii National Guard Soldiers acting as ceremonial
Royal Guards stood sentry at the palace gates.

The past lives here!


“May the dreams of your past

 be the reality of your future.”

anonymous 





And may only benevolent airs
and spirits surround
YOU
this day. . . 


. . . and always.

cloudia