Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Aloha!
Welcome to "Hump Day" Wednesday
in
Waikiki


click on the visual glories



I Think that I shall never see
A poem lovely as a tree.

A tree whose hungry mouth is prest
Against the sweet earth's flowing breast;

A tree that looks at God all day,
And lifts her leafy arms to pray;

A tree that may in summer wear
A nest of robins in her hair;

Upon whose bosom snow has lain;
Who intimately lives with rain.

Poems are made by fools like me,
But only God can make a tree.
Joyce Kilmer


"The cat is above all things, a dramatist"
Margaret Benson





"Cats are dangerous companions for writers
because cat watching is a near-perfect method
of writing avoidance."

Dan Greenburg


><>


There's never any awkwardness;
I think I love Kitty's
sincerity
most of all.



ALOHA,
cloudia

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

Tuesday Afternoon

ALOHA,
Friend

it's
TUESDAY in WAIKIKI



Ever had a song stuck in your head?
This one has been with me for decades.
Click on the song, as we wander Tuesday together.




now click on the photos for visual enticement

"Recent findings prove the brain is more flexible than we used to think.

With practice, we can change our habits
and even our natural disposition."

Tal Ben-Shahar (Italics mine)




Hawaiian Spotted Eagle Ray



"The number one predictor for general well being is not money or prestige but the time we spend with those that are near and dear to us.
Enjoying close and intimate relationships with those who care about us
is an absolute prerequisite of happiness.
But it is precisely these relationships that suffer most
in our hectic modern life."
Ben-Shahar

(I believe that our blogging relationships qualify!)





"We've all been trained to maximize every minute of our day.
But people who are able to focus on just one thing-
even for one or two hours a day-
are not only happier in their work,
they're also more productive and creative.
Less can be more."

Tal Ben-Shahar is the author of the books:

Happier
and
The Pursuit of Perfect




"Less can be more."

I like that.
How about
Y O U
?



ALOHA,
cloudia

Monday, January 18, 2010

Narrative Emerging

ALOHA!
Even Monday is Beautiful
here in
WAIKIKI


click on the golden beauty
Another Waikiki sunset



"There is no pleasure in having nothing to do;
the fun is in having lots to do
and not doing it."
May Wilson Little

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I was interviewed by the very cool Webneetech.com!
You can see it by clicking HERE.


This guy carries a spare (hand)!


"A criminal is a person with predatory instincts
who has not sufficient capital to form a corporation."
Howard Scott, economist




Two yellow trees converse


"Goodwill is the only asset
that competition cannot
undersell or destroy."
Marshall Field




><>


We have come to the end of one narrative.
No one really knows
what the next storyline will be.
But there are some new themes
emerging;
Elite panic plays in counterpoint
to the innate humanity, resourcefulness,
local knowledge
and skills
of
average people
(like you and me).

And you know what?


I'm sure that we have
what it takes!


Glad to share this moment in history with
YOU!



ALOHA, cloudia

If you have the time check out an extraordinary blog post HERE

Sunday, January 17, 2010

Honolulu Sunday

ALOHA, Friend

it's

SUNDAY in Honolulu


Click on the history
After a generation of American Protestant Missionaries,
the Ali`i (Royalty) of Hawaii discovered the Anglican Church
which actively supports royalty.
King Kamehameha IV and Queen Emma formally invited the church to establish a mission in the isles in 1860.
These two monarchs also established Queens Hospital -
today the premier medical facility in the Pacific.





Today, St. Andrews Cathedral is a part of the urban fabric
of our Polynesian Metropolis.


"I am I plus my surroundings,
and if I do not preserve the latter,
I do not preserve myself."
Jose` Ortega y Gasset



This painting of a homeless worshipper speaks to the modern mission
of St. Andrews, though it is right next door to the governors historic home
(Queen Liliuokalani's Washington Place) and
across Beretania (Britannia) Street from our State Capitol.



Here we see explorers Captain Cook and Captain Vancouver
with the King.


This icon was blessed on the Feast Day of the Monarchs, November 28, 1999.
(the anniversary of their confirmation in 1862 -
the King died about a year later at age 29).
Please excuse the blurry shot - but an icon is a glimpse into the other world,
something the camera can not convey



The feathered staff is called a Kahili, it is an emblem of the Ali`i.



On Wednesday's you can hear Hawaii's largest pipe organ,
a heroic Aeolian-Skinner with nearly 5000 pipes.
What an aural pummeling!



And last, but not least, I give you Surfing Jesus.






"More people are flattered into virtue
than bullied out of vice."
R.S. Surtees



ALOHA, cloudia

Saturday, January 16, 2010

Je Suis Flaneur

ALOHA
it's
S A T U R D A Y
in
H O N O L U L U

Let's take a drive, and talk about strolling. . .


click on the random moments


"If you limit your actions in life
to things that nobody can possibly find fault with,
you will not do much."
Lewis Carol (AKA, Charles Lutwidge Dodgson)





"There is no Enter key to change the line,
only the forward progression of time
that allows for no indents, paragraphs or, deletes."
Mark Durfee




"Perhaps all the dragons of our lives
are princesses who are only waiting
to see us once beautiful and brave."
Rilke




"The little things? The little moments?
They aren't little."
Jon Kabat-Zinn


><>



They say that self awareness is to be prized
so I should be happy to know that there is a word for people like me:
Aloha. My name is Cloudia and I am a Flaneur.
I walk around Honolulu - therefore I am.

The fairy terns (in their 3s and 4s) flying out to sea for the day,
the clouds (hello cousins!)
and the faces of people
from all over the world - of every condition
speak to the solitary walker.

My grandma was a great walker
and now it is my main exercise.
(For mind, soul, and even the body).


Passing through the beauty
clearing my head. . .

I'm never without my
camera
or a note pad!

Ideas arise
vague anxieties subside
money-making schemes emerge
and I keep walking. . .


Perhaps not unlike the Walking Man.


And soon
reliably
I'm feeling restored,
fresh,
yet more my original self
with every passing block and beach.

New / old
past/present/future
dancing for once
in harmony.

The weather in Honolulu has been sunny, bright,
and without sweat
thanks to the (relatively) cool, teasing breezes.
The word perfect comes to mind. . .
So thanks for walking along with me!
You make me a blogger
instead of a bum.

Glad you share these little moments with me.
The "little"
means a lot.


Warmly, cloudia



Friday, January 15, 2010

Bestirred, Not Shaken

ALOHA!
E KOMO MAI- WELCOME
it's
Friday
in
Waikiki

click on photos unless you fear heights
Leon up the mast



"A man of understanding has lost nothing,
if he has himself."
Michel de Montaigne





Working up high



"A desk is a dangerous place
from which to watch the world."
John le Carre`






But don't forget to look down too!




"Everybody gets so much information all day long
that they lose their common sense."
Gertrude Stein


><>




The nations gather on the tarmac.
Lines of French officials in their distinctive uniforms,
pass search equipment hand to hand.

Look, there are the Chinese beneath a waving red flag.

Patient rescue dogs survey the scene with their intelligent faces.

The nations have landed in dusty Port-au-Prince.

Here one is obligated to genuflect to finance
and mention that Haiti is the poorest nation in the western hemisphere, even though the recent earthquake deftly demonstrates
the limitations of status, money, and the other talismans we rely on
to protect us from the unknown.

Uncertainty stubbornly remains the default condition of human life anyway -
The presidential palace, and the cathedral are largely rubble,
along with tens of thousands of more humble dwellings.

Bodies line the streets.

The dead and dying remain pinned under debris.


Asked if there was the danger of unrest, one Haitian said:
"This was no one's fault. Yes there is sometimes political or social anger here, but this is a time when all of us must help one another."

Recently I read a piece in the New Yorker that discussed the role
"elite panic" played in the aftermath of hurricane Katrina.
Initially, as described in virtually all disaster studies,
people assisted and comforted one another heroically.
But in Katrina, those in charge (police, officials) fled the scene.
Response from the outside was hamstrung by bureaucratic procedure,
but also by an outsize concern for security issues.

By fearing disorder, those who should be expected to "pitch in"
brought it about through their own delay.

This very disconnect of those "in the bubble,"
the "elites"
is a very telling thing.

Their distinction between us and them is the rot at the root of our system.

One reason that I cannot work in the corporate world, or down at the legislature, is my egalitarian sensibility.
Every person is of value,
I regard each person as a fellow on this journey
with warm, polite informality.

The obvious preening self-regard and self-seriousness of some seems a species of original sin to me. While I am friendly, I am not deferential. How could I ever be a courtier?

Yes, disaster teaches us what really matters.
The ways we think about
and treat each other
are revealed to be of bed rock importance
when the shaking stops.

So appreciate your own un-shaken world today
your home
your loved ones
your town.

Even if covered in snow
there is incredible warmth there.

And God bless the Haitian people.
(I know She is!)

And a Warm Aloha here for
YOU! cloudia


Thursday, January 14, 2010

Listen to the Warmth


ALOHA

Freezing Friends
Welcome to
THURSDAY
in
WARM WAIKIKI

click on photos to thaw out
Thinking of a title for this post,
I came up with
"Listen to the Warm."

Ring any bells?




"To change something, build a new model
that makes the existing model obsolete."
Buckminster Fuller


"A fine quotation
is a diamond on the finger of a man of wit,
and a pebble
in the hand of a fool."
Joseph Roux




><>


Remember Rod McKuen
("Listen to the Warm")
that rarest of all things:
a popular, mainstream poet?


Before him
it was Robert Frost,
rewarding the average reader
but not disappointing the scholar either.


Who do we have that is like that today?
Kanye West?
(Just kidding!)


Maya Angelou
is considered political.
There is very little that we ALL subscribe to.


The Simpsons,



Celebrating their 25th year, is the longest-running show on TV.
The characters are beloved (and bemoaned) all over the world.


Don't have a COW,
Man!

Perhaps there are no longer "mainstream" anything?
My favorite poets of today are much closer than some pedestal
on the top of a mountain somewhere.
In fact they are bloggers like you & me!

You can even visit them in an instant by clicking:

Walking Man

&

Shay




Aloha ha ha, cloudia