ChoicePoints October 2006

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Hawaii: The Pause that Refreshes

It's never a hardship to spend time in Hawaii.  Having just returned from two weeks in the sun, I still catch myself glancing out the window, expecting to see swaying palm trees and ocean views in the background.  The smell of the salt air has been replaced with the scent of fallen leaves in wet grass.  As the memories of another Canadian summer begin to fade, I am reminded of my connections to things that change and to things that, within the change, always stay the same.

One of these is Huna and the gift of the Hawaiian people to the world - the gift of the aloha spirit.  I chose to engage again in a nine-day Huna intensive as a participant, relaxing into the sounds, smells and sights as they unfolded, letting my thoughts and my spirit wander wherever it chose to go.  Wrapping my tongue around the language of the Hawaiians, and welcoming the vibrations of the chants as their waves moved through me - opening and awakening - left me feeling very much at home in this 'foreign' place.

For me, the spirit of aloha does not change. It is the experience of invite and allow... of opening and welcoming... of live well and large and in that life, make room for others to do so for themselves.  It is an invitation to discover... to explore and wander and wonder... and to become willing to decloak to myself and to my world.  It is the inspiration to engage... to express and connect... in ways that honour the truth of who I know myself to be, without surrendering the unfolding truth of who I might become.  In that moment, I emerge from my own potential into an expression of its form in this life, in this breath, in this time.  I am very mindful that I could never have planned or designed what has emerged.  It just 'is'.

And within all of this, Huna changes. As I grow and evolve, so does the Huna of my expression grow and evolve. As I become welcoming of and embrace the waves of my own evolution, so does the Huna of my expression expand and enliven, opening more doors - wider and faster - that I might gain momentum rather than become lost in the details. Life is not lived in the details but in the spaces between details that invite curiosity and a difference in perspective.

Perhaps more than anything else, my days in Kona awakened me to a new discovery - a discovery that my compelling attraction through Huna draws me to the creators of Huna...to the people of the Kingdom of Hawaii, their culture and their lives. Inside me, where I live, I 'know' things that I cannot explain. I asses this 'knowing' against my 'right' to know since, after all, I am not Hawaiian. And yet, in the Spirit of Aloha that is the greatest gift I allow myself to receive, my continuing journey now includes one of learning how to allow myself to 'know' that which I am not supposed to... know... deep in the tissue of my being. I am unwilling to deny the truth of my own experience. For me, the power that is Huna lies in its invitation to be claimed for us all.

I return from Hawaii revitalized and refreshed - and I also return far more willing to trust the truth of my own experience. As ancient as Huna is, there is always room for more! I am reminded of a comment attributed to Uncle George Naope (a 'living treasure' of Hawaiian culture) when asked about holding to the ways of the past. He asked "You know that song... 'I want to go back to my little grass shack? Well, I don't!" Uncle then went on to speak to the changes of electricity and running water, and how we can add to our lives without losing anything that we already hold as valuable.

And so it is with me. I can add to my experience of Huna - and expand it and accelerate it - without losing any of its value. I am clear inside myself - where I live - that the approaching Huna Retreat at Oceanstone will be one of the most powerful in my experience. Within that which stays the same - the spirit of aloha - I welcome and anticipate the change to come.

Louise

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