Wednesday, March 31, 2010

The Most Beautiful Flower with the Exquisite Scent of All the Good that Life has to Offer

2/28/94













The lesson of:

“The Most Beautiful Flower with the

Exquisite Scent of All the Good

that Life has to Offer
Written by Kahuna Don



You are “Traveler” seeking the meaning of your life and what to do when you find the answer. You have traveled thousands of miles, searched through many countries, and have exhausted all resources available. One day, you find yourself atop a mountain high above a tropical rain forest. Weary and disappointed almost to the point of hopelessness, you recall the lesson of “The complete Huna breath.” Closing your eyes you begin when suddenly you catch a faint fragrance unlike anything you have ever experienced. Instantly, you are on your feet, your heart racing with excitement, vectoring to determine the direction of this fragrance. It appears to be coming from the edge of the cliff. Looking over and down the face of this sheer cliff, you see a lone plant with a flower growing from a tiny crack in the stone. It is “The Most Beautiful Flower with the Exquisite Scent of All the Good that Life has to Offer.” Trembling with excitement, you must get a closer look. Tying a rope around a large rock, you rappel to the site. The moment you approach “The Most Beautiful Flower with the Exquisite Scent of All the Good that Life has to Offer,” you know that this is what you have been searching for all of your life. This moment, this time, this place, is yours. Hanging by a rope, gazing majestically, totally spellbound, a voice from the flower speaks and says, “We have found each other, For I too have been searching for you.”

I invite the question —

What will you do?

Ka Honu Kai ( The Sea Turtle ) by Kahuna Don

12/2000


Queens Bath, Princeville, Kaua’i



Ka Honu Kai - written by Kahuna Don

(The Sea Turtle)

Sea Turtle — Sea reptile having a horny, toothless beak and a short stout body enclosed with a shell.



Last year, In December of 2000, I was vacationing with friends in the town of Princeville on the Island of Kaua’i. The “Garden Isle,” very beautiful and majestic. I was there the year before and visited “Queens bath,” a tourist scenic spot which is located on the North shore.

To get there, you must navigate a very slippery treacherous foot path that winds down from the road to the rugged lava rocks at the waters edge. No place for the “faint of heart.”

When the tide is in, the waves pound against the rocks spraying foamy salt water high into the air filling the many tide pools that pocket the beach. No sand, only coarse, sharp black lava rocks.

While standing at a vantage point overlooking the “Bath” and the open sea, I caught a glimpse of something in the water just beyond the rocks. It was a very large, mature “Sea turtle.” WOW! I said to myself looking right at the “turtle,” “The sea water is rough and choppy here — the waves are crashing on the rocks. It looks dangerous for you to be here.

S.T. -- Why? I am happy and comfortable. The sea water knows me — the waves know me, the currents know me and I know them. We are in harmony with each other. What you see as danger is only an illusion. Do I look as if I am in trouble? Look how effortless I swim! I can move my flippers with ease — I do not crash on the rocks. Sometimes life can look like this — rough and choppy, with waves crashing around you. Why are you afraid for me? I am not afraid! See! I swim with effortless grace — watch me and learn — I move with the current.

ME — But I can see that the water is very rough and looks menacing — very powerful, too powerful for you perhaps?

S.T. — I am here for you — to see. I am on the surface to take a breath, to rest a bit, then I dive and work my flippers to get to the limu (seaweed) that is attached to the rocks below. Does the limu run from me? No! It lives its entire life in the same place. Is it afraid of me? No! Is it afraid of the current? I know limu and limu knows me. Together, we are links in the chain of life, supporting each other.

ME — You are alone — I see that you are all alone.

S.T. — Why? I am with the waves, the current, the rocks, the sky, with you. I am not alone!

If I were in any kind of danger, would you not help me? Of course you would. That’s why I chose you and that’s why I am here. You are at one with the sea — you were born and grew up here in Hawai’i. You also know the waves, the current, the rocks. We — are not alone! I am an animal. I listen to my instincts — DO YOU?

ME — Ae! Mahalo a nui loa e ka Honu kai! Yes! Thank you very much, Sea Turtle for teaching me. Mahalo!