Thursday, September 15, 2011

How To Blog

A L O H A !



" How one walks through the world,
the endless small adjustments of balance,
is affected by the shifting weights
of beautiful things
. "
 
Elaine Scarry









" Always live life
with your head in the clouds. "

  Gavin Pretor-Pinney








" You will always
be your child's favorite toy. "

Vicki Lansky





" What a child doesn't receive
he can seldom later give.  "

P.D. James,  
Time to Be in Earnest






> < } } ( ° >
 
 
 
When young,
more often than
not,
all of my sentences began with
"I"
 
 
There was much to express
and all about
"Me."
 
 
I dreamed that someday
many would be interested
in that "I."
 
 
 
The many 
would appreciate
"Me."
 
 
Then I'd be
the special
one!



 
But I have learned
to be more interested
in
 
"You." 
 
 
 
 
Now often I begin 
with that word,
"You"
 
 
 
 
or a question 
to welcome
"You" in.
 
 
 
 
 
As  Ruskin said:
  " When a man is wrapped up in himself,
he makes a pretty small package. "

So-
If you wish to blog,
to write,
I'd say:
 
' Be who you are,
but it's not about
yourself. '
 
 

It's all about
the one who comes
( like a miracle )
the one who reads.
 
 

Care about 
that reader,
 
 
 
and what you write
may be worthy
of their time
and attention.
 
 

My life is the topic
of this blog,
but it's purpose is
 
Y O U
 
and the connection
that we make.

Each time you visit,
you truly make my
spirit shine.

It's all about
Us!

So HAPPY
that it is.
 
                                    Thank YOU, cloudia





 
     

Wednesday, September 14, 2011

Huge NEWS

ALOHA    FRIENDS !

When you live on a boat, as we do, 
THIS is your view!
There is little to see out your porthole,
 maybe one palm tree
 that moves out of sight
with the movements of the boat
at the end of it's ropes.



Yes, this has been home for 20 years,
as I posted about recently



We don't HAVE a view,
we ARE the view!




But all that is about to change
BIG TIME



Below
you can see
my 
N E W
V I E W!




I'm beside myself.
Bathroom, Kitchen,
S P A C E. . . 


Housing is expensive on islands,
and we looked at many
depressing places-




But finally found a situation
a couple of blocks from
the harbor.
My days can still begin
with a walk on Waikiki Beach.




“ I have heard the mermaids singing, 
each to each. ”
 
 T. S. Eliot
 








So I'll still see the familiar neighbors:
“ Why do we love the sea?
It is because it has some potent power
to make us think things we like to think. ”
 
Robert Henri


Just not LIVE with them.








I just hope this sailor can adjust.
But I KNOW
that I
WILL!




So please excuse my absence
if I'm not around your blogs
as much as I'd like.


Now you know.
But please don't tell Kitty yet.


I'm gonna lay down now.


My sea legs are confused,
and my head
is SPINNING!


But no more emergencies in the night
like THIS one,
that caused my husband 
to miss my nieces wedding.


Or THIS one
that almost sank us!


THIS scary one,


or the TWO Tsunami alerts
HERE & HERE.


Guess I'm just getting soft.


Hooray!


            What do you think? warmly cloudia

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

Golden

A L O H A !




"A box without hinges, key, or lid,
yet golden treasure inside is hid.  "


J. R. R. Tolkien






" All theory, dear friend, is gray, 
but the golden tree of life
springs ever green.  "


Johann Wolfgang von Goethe







" Friendship is the golden thread 
that ties the heart 
of all the world.  "

John Evelyn


Golden
 > < } } ( ° >
Fish

" The golden age is before us, not behind us. "

William Shakespeare 

Share one of YOUR Treasures
                             with us in Comments. Warmly, cloudia

     

Monday, September 12, 2011

Waikiki Morn

ALOHA !




" Laughter is an instant vacation. "

Milton Berle






" Four hoarse blasts of a ship's whistle
still raise the hair on my neck
and set my feet to tapping. "

John Steinbeck






" Love flies, runs, and rejoices;
it is free 
and nothing can hold it back. "

Thomas a Kempis

 > < } } ( ° >
     

Sunday, September 11, 2011

To Say for Sept. 11

ALOHA !




Has it been Ten Years?










We all remember
where we were
on that day








The Anniversary
of the September 11th Attack
brings up lots of emotions.

On that day, we knew that life
would never be the same.

At that time
we were human,
we were Americans,
we were Free People
All of Us - all around the world.
Together.

We were not right-wing, or left-wing;
We ran up our country's flag
in the thousands,
everywhere,
and we loved each other.

While I dreaded this weekend
for the memories it would stir,
something unexpected has arisen.

The survivors, the rescuers, the widows 
and the orphans
are once again in the spotlight

And instead of inconsolable pain
what I feel is how Magnificent they are,
how beautiful people are
when we remember what is really
important.

So instead of feeling pain,
I identify these strong emotions
as gratitude
and admiration.

Instead of feeling loss,
I feel surprising wonder
as I say to myself:

'How magnificent people are!'

" Many decry our current divided politics
but I see it another way;
this is a democracy
and we disagree, and we fight 
for what we believe in.
But when a September 11th happens
we remember what counts
and we all pull together. "
Rudolph Giuliani





Please visit another New Yorker today,
our blogging sister Daryl 
HERE  
for a Very Special Tribute.


        Thank YOU for being a friend, cloudia

Saturday, September 10, 2011

20 Years Afloat


ALOHA, 


Landlubbers!









" The sea pronounces something, 
over and over,
 in a hoarse whisper;
I cannot quite make it out."

- Annie Dillard
























"The cure for anything is salt water - 
sweat, tears, or the sea." 
Isak Dinesen


"For whatever we lose
 (like a you or a me),
It's always our self 
we find in the sea."

 e.e. cummings






























In places like Honolulu where population is high,
 land scarce,
or real estate is otherwise dear,
some folks live on the water,
like the boat families of Hong Kong harbour 
or the artists of Sausalito.


Honolulu homes and apartments are rather expensive,
 so people who want to live here 
must accept accommodations
 that they might turn their noses up at elsewhere.
 Home ownership can seem unreachable 
to the average person 
without a “family head-start.” 




When an old friend of ours asked:
 “Why don’t you buy so-and-so's boat?” 
My reasonable husband reasonably asked: 
“And do what with it?” 


Then our friend made a bold suggestion
 that has changed our lives:

“You could LIVE on it.”




We HAD sailed around the Caribbean out of sight of land, and fantasized about living on the homey new motor-sailors at the boat show, but that boat?! Perhaps with a bit (read TONS) of hard, dirty work?
 Hmmmmm. 


The politics of harbor life was another education all together! Our Island state has fewer recreational boat slips than many land-locked states back on the continent boast of. State operated harbors have been permitted to become shamefully threadbare over recent decades, and the wait-list to get a boat slip (let alone a live-aboard slip!) is something out of Kafka. 


But-
Today I’m (still mostly) happy 
to live with my husband, our cat,
 and all my memories and demons,
 on board our 55 year old, locally built,
 cutter-rigged 
pinky-stern line island trader. 
She’s steel, like a solid old car 
(or a dumpster!). 

This is not the boat that comes to mind
 when you hear the word “yacht”
 but it’s functional, funky, and “home.” 

Actually, it’s the boat a child draws:
 mast, Popeye wheelhouse, high bowsprit,
 and three round portholes on both sides,
 port and starboard.

 Electricity, phone (and Internet),
 water, and even cable TV 
come aboard via hoses, cables & cords.


Storms make for exciting times
 as the falling rain drives into the roiling sea
 all around us.

 Breezes stir us at the end of our ropes, 
winds rock us to sleep, 
and high winds handle our home like a petulant kid.

 But there’s no one upstairs, or through the wall
 (no humans anyway).

And there is a sovereignty about boats.

 “Permission to come aboard?” “DENIED!” 




At night it’s beautiful to be at the town’s edge,
 between civilization and the immortal sea. 

Jumping on board is entering a special world. 

Of course, there are unsavory “issues” 
that no one wants to talk about:
 our “waste” is not merely “flushed”
 but must be contained and conveyed appropriately – enough said, 
except that it is NOT elegant 
to be carrying one’s night-soil or chamber-pot
 to the receptacle! 
Especially not EVERY DAY. 

The giant tractor trailer-sized diesel engine
 in my “dressing room”
 is not what you would see
 in the closet of a fashionista.

 But I do have time to read, to write,
 and a great story
 to “top” any posturing stuffed shirt 
that I may meet:

 I live on my boat in Waikiki.

 Shuts up airport boors immediately


 Sometimes I dream of a real closet, 
a real kitchen
 (instead of the tiny “camping” refrigerator,
 toaster oven, and microwave
 I make use of now).


My closest neighbors are reef fish
 like Moorish Idols, 
Trigger Fish, 
and the occasional sea turtle
 like neighborhood favorite “Patty” 
with her missing fore flipper. 



Oh!
 And Boxy, my pet box fish.
 He looks eerily like a big, soulful face,
 with brown expressive eyes grafted onto the front 
of a square fish body like a psychedelic nightmare.
 If he weren’t so sweet-natured 
he’d probably really creep me out, 
you know?


My human neighbors are a special breed, too:
 boat people. 












The always immediate 
and changing
 eternal sea 
makes light of today’s “important” concerns. 
Things always look different
 out here on the water, off shore, un-tied.

 Even boats that rarely leave the confines of the harbor 
remain attached to solid land only by a slender line of rope,
 a rope that may be thrown at any time. 

Floating out here at the edge we have furled sails, 
the sleeping engine, full water tanks,
 even boxes of canned beans. 
We are ever ready to slip away on the tide 
that always seems to be flowing somewhere. 
else. Yet…yet we stay in Waikiki…


Yes, our home is constantly moving, bobbing, swaying,
 and heeling with the wind.

 Such a home nurtures different certainties
 about home and foundations.

 Our main attachments are to nature,
 and to each other: other boat people. 
We have learned that boat people will always 
catch your thrown rope and make it fast.


 And they expect that you will do the same 
for them,
 that’s just the way of the waves. 

One day, the neighbor in the next slip will be gone,
 leaving only an empty space of water. 

Then a new neighbor in a new house 
will arrive
 to share our narrow dock to solid land. 

Boat people know that nothing is forever,
 except maintenance.

 Shipmates will sail on different tides at last,
 and nothing really lasts
 except the dear harbor,
 the frigate birds, sailing clouds,
 monthly jellyfish, 
and the sea itself,
 constantly morphing,
 eternal
 with it’s ever changing light,
 the spinning seasons,
 and our passing wakes
 stretching out behind us. 

Nothing else remains-
 except Diamond Head
 (that sphinx!)
and the way we choose to feel
 about it all.

 Here at the edge of Waikiki.


Thoughtful Diamond Head shields us 
from the earlier dawn,
 letting us sleep in a bit,
 and Splash the harbor cat
 stirs in the pink basket 
of a little girl’s bicycle
 chained to the rack at the head of G – Dock. 

 No one exactly “owns” Splash,
 but she has lots of friends, 
and lots of names,
 and is clearly too friendly and self possessed 
to be a feral wild child. 

She is simply part of the Ala Wai Harbor,
 part of our community.


Older (or younger!) couples 
whose very appearance screams: 
“Maine!” “Ohio!” “Stuttgart!” or “Beloit!” 
thoughtfully muse upon the tethered boats, 
and our alluring harbor bulletin boards 
where boats for sale,
 and crewing positions to Tahiti, 
are offered. 

Till the wife (usually it’s the wife)
 gets hungry for breakfast at the Harbor Pub and,
 clutching her discount coupon,
 drags her husband away from what “might have been” 
and ultimately back to their normal life elsewhere. 


Having fallen under the harbor’s magical spell
 a lucky, 
blessed few of us
 never leave. 

Like Splash the harbor cat 
we awaken to another gentle Waikiki morning. 

What will there be to eat today? 

Who will I smile upon or talk with
 on my slow progress up the beach this afternoon?



  Each day here is unique in beauty. . . 
Just like all the others,
 because it opens its petals
 here in magical Waikiki. 

So the white doves of Fort DeRussy,
 Splash the harbor cat, 
and me,
 we’ll hold a place for you
 under the palms, 
right in front of the Hula Mound.




It's been
20 Years
this week!


A L O H A! Cloudia



See us underway: