Friday, March 25, 2011

Little-Known Great

Aloha    Friend-

Just days before the earthquake & tsunami
Hawaii lost a living treasure,
Herb Kawainui Kane.
Come meet this remarkable person
now. . .

Behind this land of Aloha there is a past.

It begins in the sea's deepest depths,

where we broke out in fire.  

A fiery goddess danced creation,

the plants and birds placed themselves here

and rejoiced. 

And then (only then) the people could come. . .



by Herb Kane

Great voyagers they were.

While all the world clung near to coasts,

they knew and followed the sea,

currents, birds and stars were their colleagues. 

Following the Hoku Le`a (the Star of Gladness)

they came here to virgin islands and named them

'Hawaii Nei'

&

'Hawaii Loa'

 names shrouded in the mists of Polynesian history,

shrouded in the mysteries. . . 

No one knows what they mean. Or they're not talking.



Herb Kane's Battle of the Pali

Great kingdoms came and went. 

Keawe kings ruled the Big Island.

Then one arose who saw the first ships of Captain Cook,

and who then united the islands

in the face of a suddenly bigger world.

Kamehameha The Great, the 'Lonely One' 

drove Oahu's defenders over the dramatic Pali cliffs

just above our Honolulu Town.

  We drive over the Pali

with ghosts and gods in our cars,

we know about these things,

largely because of one man:

 

HERB KAWAINUI KANE 
 (pronounced KAH-ney)
Historian, Fine Artist, Author, Hawaiian.

Born in 1928, raised in Waipi'o Valley and Hilo, Hawai'i, Mr. Kane served in the US Navy,
then studied at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, earning his master's degree 1953, and also at the University of Chicago.

Fortunately, he set up his studio
and his home
in rural South Kona
on the island of Hawaii,
(near my first Hawaiian home in a coffee shack).

While anthropologists strenuously disagreed 
about the peopling of these islands,
Mr. Kane and a few like-minded friends birthed the idea of building a real-life Hawaiian voyaging canoe, the like of which had not been seen in centuries.



Calling her Hokule`a,
and naming Herb Kane her first captain back in 1975,
was a first chapter in
the reclaiming of pride and respect to the native Hawaiian people who lost so much
along with their sovereignty.

The Holule`a sailed without instruments,
and suddenly it was cool to be Hawaiian!

Music and Hula flourished
and there was again pride 
in the old ways & wisdom.

In 1984 the artist/captain was elected
a Living Treasure of Hawaii.

In 1987 "The Year of the Hawaiian" 
he was one of sixteen persons chosen as
Po'okela (Champion).

From 1988 to 1992 he served as a founding trustee of the Native Hawaiian Culture & Arts Program, a Federal program at Bishop Museum. 

In 1998, he was awarded Bishop Museum's Charles Reed Bishop Medal.

In 2002, he received an award for excellence from  The Hawaii Book Publishers Association.

He is a 2008 recipient of an honorary doctorate awarded by the School of the Art Institute of Chicago.

 
Herb's Hawaii commemorative stamp for the U.S. Postal Service, celebrated 50 years of statehood, when released in August 2009.

But those are just awards.

This man raised his people,
his home,
and human dignity.
He redeemed the ancestors.

What a legacy!
renowned_Hawaii_artist_Herb_Kane_dies

The Hokule`a has since voyaged as far afield as Japan, visiting all corners of the Polynesian Triangle, to Tahiti and the Marquesas.  

And when we Hawaii people think of grandmother Pele (the volcano goddess)
of the Pali Battle,
of the discovery of Hawaii by canoes,
it is the images created by Herb Kane that we see
in our hearts & minds.
     Herb Kane in his Kona studio, October 2010. Photo by David Croxford for HAWAII Magazine



 renowned_Hawaii_artist_Herb_Kane_dies
“Every brushstroke and every word
has brought and will forever bring
wisdom, beauty, inspiration
and understanding.”
Herb Kawainui Kane


My little Hawaii novel was considered worthy of being brought along
on Hokule`a's Japan voyage!

"Thank you; we have lots of time to read out there."
Nainoa Thompson, Captain of the Hokule`a







Thursday, March 24, 2011

Simpler Times

A l o h a !



"Here is a test
to find out whether your mission in life
is complete.

If you're alive, it isn't." 

Richard Bach





Simple, boring peace & quiet;
Just what the people of Jerusalem
are NOT enjoying today.
We send them,
and all who cope with
violence,
our Aloha.





“To be humble to superiors is duty,

to equals courtesy,

to inferiors nobleness.”

 

Benjamin Franklin



And now, let's take a trip to a simpler time. Click on the song,
listen while you view the video!


Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Eye Path

Aloha to 
                                YOU!

Patiently Playing 'Second Fiddle'


"Oh, the comfort - 
the inexpressible comfort
of feeling safe with a person - "

Dinah Craik, 
A Life for a Life, 1859




"Marriage
is grad school
for the soul."
cloudia



"Let us be grateful
to people who make us happy, 
they are the charming gardeners 
who make our souls blossom. "

Marcel Proust





"Someone to tell it to 
is one of the fundamental needs
of human beings. "

Miles Franklin


><}}(°>
 
 
 

Every experienced motorcyclist knows
NOT to look at the rock ahead of you
in the road.
The bike will follow your eye;
Look at the path AROUND the obstacle
and that is the way you will go.
        Just like life. . .cloudia





Monday, March 21, 2011

Secrets in the Sky

'ALOHA'
              Means Welcome!

"This is the beginning of a new day. 
You have been given this day to use as you will. 
You can waste it or use it for good. 
What you do today is important
because you are exchanging a day of your life for it.
When tomorrow comes, this day will be gone forever;
in its place is something that you have left behind...
                          let it be something good."
                                                    annon






"Seeing into darkness is clarity
Knowing how to yield is strength."

Lao Tse






"We carry within us the wonders
we seek without us."

                                  Thomas Browne


You know what to do!  
    Play the song, then watch the video as you listen-






Saturday, March 19, 2011

Super Moon Tonight!

          Aloha Friend :-)


"I'd say it's worth a look."  

Geoff Chester,
US Naval Observatory,
Washington DC






Gem!    



“Truth is a gem that is found at a great depth;
whilst on the surface of this world,
all things are weighed by the false scale of custom.”

 Lord Byron 


 

                   






"Whoever possesses that chest,
possesses the leverage
to command Davy Jones to do
whatever it is he or she wants."

Captain Jack Sparrow 




Not-So-Super Moon, smiling



 “If, instead of a gem, or even a flower,
we should cast the gift of a loving thought
into the heart of a friend,
that would be giving as the angels give”
 George MacDonald




A “Super Moon”
like we will enjoy tonight,
is a new or full moon
when Mistress Moon rides within 90 percent of her closest approach to Earth.

While this happens 4-6 times a year,
NASA says that tonight's full moon will nearly coincide
with the moon's closet orbit point around the Earth, 
making tonight's performance the biggest, visible 
full moon in North America in two decades!  

Officially, a “Super Moon” is called a "perigee moon.”  But who cares about being official? 
Super moons are
about 14 percent larger and 30 percent brighter 
than non-perigee moons. . .
When the weather cooperates, that is.



 "Tonight's full Moon (March 19th)
occurs less than one hour away from perigee – a near-perfect coincidence that happens
only every18 years or so;
The last full Moon so big and close to Earth 
occurred in March of 1993."
Said Geoff Chester of the US Naval Observatory in Washington DC.


Contrary to some alarms circulating  around the Web, perigee Moons do not trigger natural disasters. The "super moon" of March 1983,  passed without incident. And an almost-super Moon in Dec. 2008
also proved harmless. 
(Besides, don't we have enough disasters
right now?)

If you want to try and see the full effect,
(and take your mind off disasters
even closer to our planet)
  then look when the Moon is near the horizon
in the early evening.
 
That is when illusion mixes with reality
to produce an incredible view,
  say the nerds at NASA. 
 
They promise that it will appear 
close enough to touch!

A super perigee Moon is still 356,577 km away. 
But in space, that's kissing distance!
So blow some to the man, or rabbit, or goddess 
that you see up there.

       Your Loony Pal, cloudia

Friday, March 18, 2011

"What If" Up & Down

Aloha - WEEKEND!

"The torment of precautions
often exceeds
the dangers to be avoided.
  It is sometimes better to abandon one's self
to destiny."

Napoleon Bonaparte




"Prudence keeps life safe,
but does not often make it happy."

Samuel Johnson







"The healthy being craves an occasional wildness,
a jolt from normality, 
a sharpening of the edge of appetite, 
his own little festival of the Saturnalia,
a brief excursion 
from his way of life. "

Robert MacIver



"The knowledge of the world
is only to be acquired in the world,
and not in a closet."

Lord Philip Dormer Stanhope Chesterfield



 ><}}(°>


What if?
Have you noticed
most of our 'what if's
are negative?

What if. . . ?
We all fill in that fearsome space.

That is 
"What If Down."

But what if GREAT things 
are just waiting to happen?
How would it change your internal weather
if your clouds were white and orange and puffy,
 speckled with
a smiling moon,
and singing with lovely
hopes?

That's
"What If Up."

We REALLY need this 
WEEKEND-
so TAKE it!

(Weather maps
show winds out of Japan
passing well north of our islands.
Nice for me, eh?)

Thanks for spending some time here with us!
This weekend,
practice your
"What If Ups."

What if something wonderful 
accepted your mental invitation!
Just muse on that for a while.

         Warmly, cloudia
 

Thursday, March 17, 2011

What's Normal Now?

Aloha   from   Waikiki!


"A person often meets
their destiny
on the road they took
to avoid it."

Jean de la Fontaine








How am I doing?


"Normal is not something to aspire to,
it's something to get away from. "

Jodie Foster




Yawn; Just fine. Thanks...



It's been a week today. . .
Since a normal evening at home (on board) became an emergency.
The sound of sirens still makes me jumpy, but I seem to be recovering
some sense of normalcy (which is really great for a certified 'worrier').

Of course it's not 'over.'
Our neighbors just over the horizon in Japan
face a nightmare that threatens to blow our way.

Everyday I hear of some local whose wife/husband is
visiting elderly relatives in Japan. Most of them have been heard from.
Oahu resident Jack Johnson is in Osaka with his family (and donated $50,000 USD).
Raiatea Helm has returned to the islands,
And the last stranded Japanese visitors have been repatriated.

Everyday there is some new 'benefit' to raise money,
we are cleaning up our debris,
and "Aloha Japan" shirts are selling out @ $20 per
100% for Japan relief.
The "Honolulu Festival" parade last Sunday
was a sea of Japanese participants chanting
"Unity" in Japanese. Quite moving as the crowds on the sidewalk
cheered them on.

It seems a small thing, all in all,
but our state has budget problems like most others at this time
and revenue projections are down
with the cancellation of many, many reservations from Japan
(and elsewhere)
So if YOU ever wanted to come to Hawaii,
this would be the time for some amazing deals!
Click on the "Honolulu Hotels" link to the right
(under all your pictures!).

Every little thing:
Pausing. Breathing. Reiki.
Accomplishing  routine tasks-
It's all helping me to remain on an even keel.
(Heh heh, literally! I'm writing this on a boat! :-)

Tomorrow will be better.
Sorry I haven't been blog visiting!
I miss you guys-

Warmly, cloudia