Lapakahi State Park

Hawaii Island



“E ho‘omalu i ke kupa‘a no ka ‘aina”  

Continue to be steadfast in your love for the land. 

~Joseph Nawahi 


I’m back in Oak Park/Chicago after 20 days on the island of Hawaii.  Well, my body is back. A group of us, hula people, went to Hawaii, the birthplace of Hula, to open to aina/land as teacher. Opening is letting go of our opinions, judgements, the small-selves that can narrow and wreak havoc in our lives.   

 

When I close my eyes during meditation, instantly I am on Hawaii Island, sitting as I did there most mornings to experience Hawaiian sunrise.   

 

Cardinals are the first to start singing in the early morning in Puako.  Mynah birds start their chatter and doves coo as the sun rises.  Dozens of white cattle egrets fly together – sometimes struggling against powerful winds - to see what fish they can catch over the frothy kai/sea light with white caps.     

 

Mama humpback whales with their calves like to frolic in the early mornings and late afternoons.  I see their spouts, then their backs and if I’m lucky I get a wave from a fin or a tail.  Or if I'm really lucky I'll see half a whale's body sticking up over the water and then a huge splash as she submerges on her side.  

 

Yesterday's early morning sky turned pink, orange and then gold.  Knowing it was my last morning, I greedily breathed in the ocean air, white plumeria filled trees, beach-land with great keawe (mesquite) forest, incredibly beautiful clouds, and numerous birds singing and chirping away.  


The sea was flat and calm.  A heavy mist descended from big white cumulus clouds over Kohala Mountain, enveloping the mountain ridges and slopes green from constant moisture.  The mist felt like my mood, sad to be leaving this beautiful place.  

 

Our group was there to learn from the ʻāina/land - the spirit of aloha it is and the aloha it naturally generates.  We have so many experiences to process: from the monsoon rains in Keaukaha that cleansed us along with Waiolena Pond, to the quiet fiery movement of magma in Halemaumau Crater - Pele’s home.


I can still hear the gentle strumming of Keoki Apokolani Carter as he serenaded us with song. We sat and listened in Kawaihae's healing breeze.  Let’s Kiss the Sky, written by Yvonne (his wife), is a fitting tribute and offering for the beauty of the great firmament above us that is us.  Keoki sang and we danced on the concrete sidewalk that overlooked keawe, sand, and ocean on that cool, cloudy afternoon  

 

Aloha means a deep love and compassion that just is.  You feel it on the ʻāina/land. Aloha and the ʻāina are deeply intertwined with Hula, like a magnificent lei. Can we be aloha when we dance? Can we be aloha in our daily lives?  How do we malama/take care of the ʻāina? How do you care for yourselves? What does it mean to love?


Mahalo nui loa and malama pono (Thank you and take good care of body, mind and heart),


June Kaililani Ryushin Tanoue

Kumu Hula, Roshi


You are Invited!


Easeful Embodiment Workshop

An afternoon of Hula, Zen mindfulness meditation,

gentle stretches, and writing with

Kumu Hula/Roshi June and Sarah Evans

No experience necessary.

Join Us!


Saturday, March 11, 2023

1:30 - 4:30 pm CST

HYBRID

Register for Easeful Embodiment Workshop
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Beginner Hula Classes


NEW ADULT Beginner Classes start

March 4 and April 8, 2023

Adults - men and women


NEW Children's Class

April 1, 2023

8:45 - 9:45 am

5 - 7 years



No experience necessary, just willingness to learn and have fun! Enjoy dancing to beautiful Hawaiian music and learning basic hand and feet movement.


Scholarships available



Juri Sekiguchi with pomelo, Hawaii

Meet Juri Sekiguchi, a beginner Hula student at Halau I Ka Pono. Illinois and member of Zen Life & Meditation Center. Juri is married and has two children. She joined us recently in our Hula & Meditation Retreat to Hawaii Island and told us this about herself.

I was born in the San Francisco Bay Area in California to my parents Yoshiko and Yoshinobu, who emigrated to the United States in the early 60's. In addition to my parents, I have two sisters, Risa and Chika, who are my best friends.


Currently, my sisters and I with our families live across the Chicagoland Area. I work in Organizational Effectiveness Consulting and attended UC Berkeley, where I studied Political Science and Japanese Studies.

 

I've visited Hawai'i five times, though mostly for work, and I was repeatedly drawn to the rich local culture. I learned about the "Path of Hula and Zen" workshop series through the Zen Life & Meditation Center, which I have been a member of since 2013. 


I first started hula through a workshop series, through which we learned a beautiful story and dance "Kaiona," choreographed by Kumu June. A funny coincidence, or perhaps proof we are all interconnected, is that Keikilani, whom I met on a previous work trip to Hawai'i, is one of Kumu June's Hula Sisters!

 

While new to Hula, Risa, Chika, and I decided to sign up for the Hula Retreat on the Big Island. It turned out to be a once-in-a-lifetime experience, truly magical and beautiful. 


We watched and documented many beautiful Hula performances by Kumu June's students in culturally significant locations and visited Kumu June and her sisters' Halau, where they treated us to dance and delicious local food. 


So many wonderful moments, too many to capture in this short piece. We were truly humbled by and honored to join this year's retreat and look forward to joining future workshops and experiences.

MAHALO NUI LOA!!!

THANK YOU VERY MUCH!!!


Mahalo Nui Loa to the following people in February who helped

Halau i Ka Pono


Tom English, Peggy Farias, Clare Martin, Susan Akers, Patricia Danko, Henry Hanale West, Junko Chow, Joy Yamasaki, Sarah Evans, Betsy Puig, Ricia Shema, Julie Kase, Lorel Madden, Moira Singh, Shar Palacio, Ruben Hanohano, Melanie Jessen, Ellen Sarvida, Mike Honu Hensen, Manoa, Keoki Carter, Hugh and Kaulana Montgomery, Keikilani Curnan, Wendy Pa'ahana Roehrig, Bernie Ohia, Mary Sakamoto, Patty Kahelelani, Cook, Gwen Baker, Kim Dubsky, Richard Standke, Juri Sekiguchi, China Sekiguchi, Risa Sekiguchi, Helen Hammer, Monica Minguillon, Liz Carabello, Linda Warring, Roshi Robert Joshin Althouse

Zen Life & Meditation Center NEWS


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Sunday Morning Zen 9 - 11 am

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9 - 9:45 am Meditation

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SMZ: March 5, 2023:

Hawaiian Epistomology & Zen by Roshi June Tanoue


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SMZ & Commit to Sit


Silent Meditation Retreat

Spring is a powerful time for renewal & transformation.

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March 19 - 25, 2023


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Strengthen one's core and alignment monthly with

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March 25th

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Learn Mindfulness Meditation from the inside-out

Begins March 28, 2023 with Chris DuSell (hybrid) and

April 8th with Karleen Manchanda (online)



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