Friday, October 8, 2010

New Blogger Editor



ALOHA!




Check out the new editor in Blogger:


Pictures can be HUGE!






Oh! Here's the Text Color!






"Regret for the things we did can be tempered by time;

 it is regret for the things we did not do

 that is inconsolable."


  - Sidney J. Harris






"I want to grow old without face lifts.

 I want to have the courage

 to be loyal to the face I have made" 

Marilyn Monroe









So I guess I can make the letters,
and the background
different colors...

This is an awesome power
that could make some visitors
violently ill...








Better learn to be judicious
with hues, LOL!


Instructions:

From your Blogger Dashboard


Click on "Settings"

Scroll down to "Global Settings"

The top option is "Updated Editor (recommended)"


There you will see a link
to check out the new features,
including improved photo upload options,
and a cool "Preview" option!


Aloha, cloudia

Thursday, October 7, 2010

Island Friends

Aloha

Let's Walk Waikiki


and See Who We Meet!






"The temple seashore
 incoming rollers
flow in time
to the holy flute"


Buson









“Contemplation seems to be about the only luxury


 that costs


 nothing.”


 Dodie Smith 





“When the mouse laughs at the cat


 there is a hole nearby”



 Nigerian Proverb








"Do not neglect to entertain strangers kindly,

for in doing so, some have entertained angels

without ever knowing it."

Hebrews 13:2


><>


Remember Sylvia Brown the psychic?
She used to appear on Montel's TV show once a week.

Little things she said
often resonated with me.

How she thought and operated
was more interesting to me
than her specific predictions.

One day she came out to thunderous applause.
Montel said: 
"They love you!"


"No,"
she said,
"They know that
I
love them."

That started me thinking:

I mean, I love humanity
(in the abstract)
but people right HERE
do (I should say 'did')
often rub me the wrong way
or fill me with
apprehension.

"What does the audience feel
when I walk through the curtain?"
I wondered.



Eventually,
I understood that I was not a 
lover,
or a fighter,
but sort of a judge.

And who enjoys the feeling
of being judged?

I have also come to understand
that the truth about us is expressed
energetically,
through 'vibes' as they say.




Over 90% of communication
is non-verbal.

Hard for a writer to believe,
but said to be true.


Fortunately,
I have since grown into a truer love
of others.
And every day brings lovely,
 ample, evidence
that my 'vibe' has changed
for the better!


Now I don't mind appearing a bit eccentric,
but I don't like to be pushy
or to let my affection get out of hand.

Aloha, after all,
 means to respect first,
means being gentle,
to simply "let others be."

It is an open invitation
not an enforcement
and means meeting each person
where they are;
Laughing with children,
crying with mourners.

All in an atmosphere
of gratitude
to every being
who shares this realm with me.

That includes 

YOU!


       Thanks very much for your visit!  cloudia





I have come to perceive
that truth expresses itself
energetically
('Vibes' if you will).

It's not about what you say,
but the feeling that you bring.


"The simple recognition that everyone else wants to be happy
 and not to suffer, just as I do,
 serves as a constant reminder against selfishness and partiality.
 It reminds us there is little to be gained from being kind
 and generous while hoping to win something in return.
 Actions motivated by a desire to earn a good name for ourselves
 are still selfish, even if they appear to be acts of kindness."

Dalai Lama


  This is the definition of Aloha!

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

Medal for My Neighbors


"Our Local Colors!"



A l o h a

&

Welcome to My Honolulu Town !


We are more than hotels








We have sweet little neighborhoods,
some with Diamond Head presiding.
(See it peeping up at the end of the street?)









We have great neighbors like these guys:



442nd Veterans at Rue de 442 sign, Bruyeres: (left to right) Art Iwasaki, George Kanatani, Sam Sakamoto, Nelson Akagi,
Fumio “Steve” Shimizu, Lawson Sakai. Photo: Ellen Sawamura, PhD





Last weekend, my (blog)invisible husband and I were having lunch at a nearby ZIPPY's (Hawaii's local chain restaurant) when a quartet of local men in their 80's & 90's were seated nearby. Their weathered skin, white hair, and white shirts caught my attention. Were they?



Yes,

having come from a memorial event they were all wearing polo shirts displaying the familiar patch of the 442. (Honored at top above)




Those old guys were true heroes,
and my eyes
filled with tears. . .





Today, Honolulu born President Obama signed a bill awarding the Congressional Gold Medal of Honor to these men: the Japanese-American heroes of World War II, a dwindling number
of whom still live
among us here in our Honolulu Town
.



The medal is being collectively awarded to the legendary "Go For Broke" regiment, made up of the 100th infantry battalion and the 442nd regimental combat team who volunteered to fight for the U.S. in World War II even as their loyalty to the country was questioned..

Two-thirds were from Hawaii, including our U.S. Senator Daniel Inouye.

“These men served the nation at a pivotal moment in our history, displaying their heroism and courage on two fronts: abroad in the fight against an absolutist fascism and at home in the face of the intolerance of racial injustice,” said Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., the bill’s chief sponsor in the House.



These fellows served even though they were branded “enemy aliens” and rendered ineligible for the draft. Some enlisted while their families were detained in internment camps.



They saw some of the most brutal fighting in WWII, suffering some 800 casualties in France rescuing the “Lost Battalion” of the 36th Division.


Senator Inouye left his arm
on the battlefields of Italy.



By the end of the war, they had become the most highly decorated military unit in U.S. history for size and length of service.


And they were some of the first Allied troops to enter the Nazi death camps.




“Their perseverance, humility and strength enabled them to triumph over life’s adversities. We must never forget the Japanese-American men and women ... who nobly served to defend their country at a time when their patriotism was in doubt,” said Rep. Hirono, D-Hawaii.



Her (interim, and soon to be electorally defeated) colleague from Hawaii, Rep. Charles Djou (in a rare example of Republican agreeability) said the medal was a sign of well-deserved respect from Congress. Their willingness to volunteer and to serve, despite facing discrimination, earned them the honor he said.



Rep. Jim McDermott, D-Wash., said the experience of the Nisei, or second-generation Japanese-Americans, should be remembered so the U.S. doesn’t treat another group of Americans the same way.






The medal will be given to the Smithsonian Institution, which will make it available for research, and for display in places associated with the units. (The legislation authorizes the Treasury to make bronze duplicates.) This highest civilian honor awarded by Congress has been given selectively since 1776, when George Washington was awarded the first.


Other honorees include the Wright Brothers, Thomas Edison, Rosa Parks and the Dalai Lama.


The Tuskegee Airmen, the first group of black fighter pilots that I posted about HERE, received the medal in 2007.




Today, Hawaii-based troops continue to display the "torch" patch in conflict zones globally.


War sucks,
But heroes must be honored.

I'm just so moved!






















Monday, October 4, 2010

TRIBALRY

Aloha!

Thanks for Visiting



The only truly valuable things

are time,

and love.

All else is mere exchange.








We all struggle with limitations.

None of us can be 100%

100% of the time.

How we handle those limits

is ultimately more important

than what they are. . .





"The question is:

'Will you be a wounded hurt-er

or a wounded healer?'"


Cornel West






"Ring the bells that still can ring

Forget your perfect offering.

There is a crack in everything,

That's how the light gets in."


~Leonard Cohen





"Peace is our gift to each other."


Elie Wiesel



<>





Your visit & comment

are gifts

that I value;

Mahalo

:)

Saturday, October 2, 2010

Make t Look EasyI

ALOHA!

Come On In-





“Here we are, trapped in the amber of the moment.

There is no why.”


Kurt Vonnegut




Complex skies




“Water has an endless horizon;

there is no limitation when you look out into the water.

There's nothing to interfere with the mind's eye projecting itself

as far as it can possibly imagine.


I suppose it's the same way people in the Midwest feel

about watching amber waves of grain or endless rows

of cornfields.


There is something exhilarating about it.”


Billy Joel






"Years and years of preparation are needed

to make it look easy."

cloudia




<>



}{


October light

is like amber

poured over the afternoon.


Even here in the sub-tropics

sunlight wanes, moments a day,

Less harsh,

more of a blessing really.

An embrace of amber

instead of a punch in the face.


Soon all the coffee in Kona

will bloom tiny white blossoms

and red red cherries.

Woven baskets

some decades old

will be worn in the rows

and catch the cherries like before.

On the continent

where I was born

smokey, cooling nights

schocks of leaning corn

scarecrows!

Jack-O-Lanterns

on the porch.

Time passes.

We don't need the geese to rub it in

but we love them;

I love this whole crazy life.

Grab for all the candy

and mischief

you can.

This October

like all the others

will be

unique.


fondly, cloudia

Friday, October 1, 2010

Shimmy Shimmy

It's ALOHA Friday!

Welcome SKY Gazers

. . . Come in and Click on Today's Song:








Waikiki Sunset



"Every truth passes through three stages



before it is recognized.


In the first, it is ridiculed.


In the second, it is opposed.


In the third, it is regarded as self-evident."


Schopenhauer







"Little moments can have a feeling and a texture that is very real."


Ralph Fiennes






"Angels. . . help to hold the world together."


Marianne Williamson





><>


Don't you just love Friday?!




Mix in the first day of Magical October


and you have an intoxication!



Kona didn't suit me
being sunny most every day.



But when I discovered Oahu's
grey, rainy days of Autumn
I was happy as a duck,
listening to the raindrops

and enjoying the private pleasures
of coffee
and newspapers.
(remember newspapers?)



Then,
best of all,
the Sun bursts out!



And once again
Hawaiian skies are eloquent.



Hope you are enjoying
the texture of YOUR place. . . .



YOUR life.



That's my wish for you today;


Thank you for your kind visit. Do leave a comment :)

cloudia