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starrwriter
11-06-2005, 02:19 PM
I suspect some of you might be interested in what it's like to live in Hawaii. Here's the inside scoop from my twisted point of view:

First, I don't really keep native women chained to the walls of my apartment in Honolulu. They come and go freely. A crazy woman lives in the apartment directly above me. I would guess she is in her late 20s and she has shaved her head to make herself look insane. She walks around talking to people who aren't there. Late at night she hammers on the walls of her apartment with a pick ax. The maintenance main says she has knocked a hole right through the wall into the adjacent apartment. Everyone complains about the noise waking them up, but the landlord refuses to evict her. He's probably afraid she will go after him with the pick ax. Her last known address was the state mental hospital. I don't think she's taking her meds anymore.

My apartment building is located at the mouth of a large tropical valley. At the rear of the valley is a mountain rainforest where no people live. I know what's up there because I lived in a Big Island rainforest for a long time: wild pigs, mountain goats, guava trees and giant tree ferns that block out all sunlight, and four trillion mosquitos. The ground is mucky from incessant heavy rainfall. In the wrong places you can sink up to your knees and never see your rubber boots again. It's a jungle out there.

Waikiki is 2 miles from my apartment. It's a concrete jungle of high-rise hotels, but it has some nice white-sand beaches. I often sit at sidewalk cafes across the street from the beach, sipping beer and ogling sweet young tourist women in their tiny bikinis. Many of them are trolling for hula-hula boys (Hawaiian beach boys who are actually young gigolos.) They want to get laid by a handsome native so they'll have something juicy to talk about back in Cedar Rapids, Iowa.

Young tourist men are looking for native women to woo, but they succeed much less often than their female counterparts. Most Hawaiian women have better sense than to crawl into the sack with a drunken tourist man who likely has a wife stashed in one of the hotels. They prefer local hunks who know how to surf. Or divorced haole (white) men like me who can show them a good time.

Chinatown starts about a mile from where I live. It is the location of infamous Hotel Street, the red light district of Honolulu where young hookers stand on every street corner at night clicking their high heels and buzzing on drugs. Chinatown is my favorite neighborhood (and not because of the hookers, so get your mind out of the gutter.) It looks exotic, like the old part of Singapore: tea shops, Asian restaurants, bars with verandas overlooking tropical gardens, century-old brick buildings, knick-knack trinkets for sale on the street.

"I think I'm turning Japanese, I really think so." Remember that song from the 80s? Across the street from my apartment building is the Japanese consulate surrounded by a rock wall. Not far away is a Zen mission (church and school) with a statue of a smiling fat Buddha out front. I often eat Japanese ramen noodles for lunch, teriyaki meat and rice for supper and I drink Japanese roasted green tea. I have become what is dolefully known among haoles as a "rice head." I could probably go to Tokyo and feel right at home.

From my rear window I can see Punch Bowl, a landmark in Honolulu. It's a 500-foot-tall lava cone covered with grass and home to a military cemetery. American soldiers from four wars are buried there. In the opposite direction I can't see Honolulu's other famous landmark, Diamond Head, because high-rise buildings block the view.

On Sundays I sometimes travel to Hanauma Bay a few miles out of the city. It's a collapsed volcanic crater that became part of the coastline millenia ago. The ocean water is crystal clear and enclosed by motley-colored coral reefs. The bay teems with sea life: schools of small reef fish, delicate angelfish and other beautiful varieties found in salt-water aquariums, larger parrotfish with beaks like parrots and teeth like human molars (for crushing coral), goatfish, flat one-eyed Hawaiian sole burying themselves in the sand. Occasionally, a manta ray or moray eel or shark is seen. If anything bites you, you can't poke them with a speargun to get even because Hanauma Bay is a marine conservation zone.

The North Shore 30 miles away is the Land Of The Laid-Back: beach bunnies, crazy surf Nazis who try to ride 50-foot waves in the winter, pot growers, aging hippies, health-food restaurants, and on a remote beach the setting of the TV series "Lost." Sunset Beach has a strange daily ritual. People gather in hushed silence late in the afternoon to wait for the "green flash" -- an optical effect when the sun dips below the horizon. If it doesn't happen, everyone goes home disappointed.

The best drive on the island is around the windward side. You pass little towns with unpronounceable Hawaiian names nestled in a lush green environment. This is the cool rainy part of the island. The leeward side is hot, sunny and bone dry like a desert. If you search the hills, you can even find prickly pear cactus.

I live between the wet zone and the dry zone. It rains occasionally, but most days are pleasantly sunny. If the tradewinds stop blowing, the equatorial air mass drifts north to cover the islands and Honolulu turns into a sauna bath. Tempers run wild and the city court is flooded with assault cases. Fortunately, this weather phenomenon only lasts a few days typically. Called Kona winds, it is named for a southerly wind so hot and humid it wilts all hope in the sweaty human animal.

jakobin
11-06-2005, 09:37 PM
wow, sounds good. wouldnt mind going to hawaii one day. i went there when i was really young and have bad memories of it because i had bad fruit on the plane that had gone 'fizzy' and i was really sick the whole time i was there, the humidity not really helping.

is hawaii at all like singapore other than weather-similarities?

starrwriter
11-07-2005, 01:15 AM
is hawaii at all like singapore other than weather-similarities?
Honolulu is very much like Singapore in physical appearance and multi-ethnic social makeup. The other islands not so much. The neighbor islands are a separate world to themselves, more rural and agriculture oriented.

Since you live in New Zealand, you might be interested to know that native Hawaiian culture is remarkably similar to Maori culture. In fact, they share a common Polynesian ancestry. The NZ movie "Once Were Warriors" was a big hit in Hawaii.

subterranean
11-07-2005, 01:44 AM
What's the connection of the first paragraph with the idea of living in Hawaii?
I mean that sort of thing/"loco" can happen/be found anywhere


I suspect some of you might be interested in what it's like to live in Hawaii. Here's the inside scoop from my twisted point of view:

First, I don't really keep native women chained to the walls of my apartment in Honolulu. They come and go freely. A crazy woman lives in the apartment directly above me. I would guess she is in her late 20s and she has shaved her head to make herself look insane. She walks around talking to people who aren't there. Late at night she hammers on the walls of her apartment with a pick ax. The maintenance main says she has knocked a hole right through the wall into the adjacent apartment. Everyone complains about the noise waking them up, but the landlord refuses to evict her. He's probably afraid she will go after him with the pick ax. Her last known address was the state mental hospital. I don't think she's taking her meds anymore.

.

starrwriter
11-07-2005, 10:48 AM
What's the connection of the first paragraph with the idea of living in Hawaii? I mean that sort of thing/"loco" can happen/be found anywhere
(1)I live in Hawaii.
(2)It happened to me here.
(3)That's the only "connection."

Also, I thought it might be humorous in a skewed sort of way. Judging from your response, I guess I was wrong.

jakobin
11-07-2005, 05:56 PM
i thought i was funny.

Polynesian culture is indeed prominent here with the maori's and yeah, i actually think its an awesome culture.

have you ever seen a maori welcome to their marae (sort of maori church)??

subterranean
11-07-2005, 07:31 PM
I should have included a smiley in my last post. I'd prefer to use the word interesting instead of humorous. Maybe it's my lack sense of humour...


Also, I thought it might be humorous in a skewed sort of way. Judging from your response, I guess I was wrong.

simon
11-07-2005, 08:43 PM
Oooh I live on an island too, but mine is not so mythical and wellknown. Little one off of canada.

starrwriter
11-07-2005, 09:34 PM
i thought i was funny.
I guess we're both wrong.


have you ever seen a maori welcome to their marae (sort of maori church)??
No, but:
maori marae=hawaiian heeiau=religious temple surrounded by rock walls.

I used to live in a place called Nahiku, which means "the seven" and refers to the stars in the Seven Sisters constellation by which Polynesian sailors navigated the Pacific ocean. All around my house in Nahiku were ruins of heeiaus where celestial navigation was taught in old Hawaii.

samercury
11-07-2005, 09:53 PM
Sounds like an interesting place :D
...Would like to visit it sometime in the future....

jakobin
11-08-2005, 06:12 AM
yeah maori marae sounds similar but they still are very prominent in a maori community, the centre point of any maori village (at least the ones where the maoris do not live in government built houses, but even then they have then, but then they are more modern. here is an example of a maori marae.

http://fury.ftw.net.nz/whanau/marae.jpg

starrwriter
11-08-2005, 01:55 PM
yeah maori marae sounds similar but they still are very prominent in a maori community, the centre point of any maori village (at least the ones where the maoris do not live in government built houses, but even then they have then, but then they are more modern. here is an example of a maori marae.
Very nice looking. Hawaiians let all their heeiaus go to ruin after missionaries converted them to Christianity. Also, they never fired a shot when the U.S. annexed the islands in 1898 and I know the Maoris fought bloody land wars to defend their culture.

jakobin
11-08-2005, 04:37 PM
yeah they did actually. i would write out the short history of new zealand but its not really that short so i wont. but i can say that the pilgims (the british) were quick to get a treaty signed between the maori's and the british (Treaty of Waitangi) but even now there are alot of doubts as to what went on in the signing of this treaty.

NNoah3
11-08-2005, 06:05 PM
As always happen one imagines that is a paradise to be able to live there. I mean because all the movies or TV shows show us this paradise so it is quite interesting what you have written here Starr. I would like to travel there some day. :wave:

jakobin
11-08-2005, 06:09 PM
what about new zealand, would u want to visit there some day too?

NNoah3
11-08-2005, 06:17 PM
Yeah, I would like to visit a lot of places :D.

starrwriter
11-08-2005, 09:22 PM
As always happen one imagines that is a paradise to be able to live there. I mean because all the movies or TV shows show us this paradise so it is quite interesting what you have written here Starr. I would like to travel there some day.
The tropical scenery, climate and underwater ocean realm are paradaisical, but like every place, Hawaii has social problems. Poverty, hard drugs, ethnic friction to name a few. I wish I could have lived in the islands before the advent of mass tourism in the early 1960s. According to old timers, Hawaii was a more enjoyable place with a much slower pace when they were kids. Also, the spirit of aloha was strong back then. It's rare today.

jakobin
11-09-2005, 12:04 AM
new zealand is alright still as there is not alot of friction between maoris and new zealanders, but it could easily rise up.

(gollum...grra....Smeagol wishes that he was....AH!! NO!!!)

NNoah3
11-09-2005, 03:39 PM
The tropical scenery, climate and underwater ocean realm are paradaisical, but like every place, Hawaii has social problems. Poverty, hard drugs, ethnic friction to name a few. I wish I could have lived in the islands before the advent of mass tourism in the early 1960s. According to old timers, Hawaii was a more enjoyable place with a much slower pace when they were kids. Also, the spirit of aloha was strong back then. It's rare today.

The "civilization" brings its problems. I used to live in a beautiful small town near the coast, the beach is far like 15 or 20 minutes by car. In those days going to the beach was a party for us (my brothers, friends and I) the shore and the water were clean. Then some people had the great ideas to attract tourism and started to build hotels, restaurants and the peaceful beach was gone.
Last time that I visited it I was completely disappointed. It is a big shame that these same people who had the "great ideas", didn't worry to take care of the beach.
I have some friends living there, and they told me that they have a plan along with government to clean the beach. I hope that that works.