Reading is for winners!

DonorsChoose.org is beyond cool.  For K’s birthday,  his brother gifted him with a donation to the site. The website is a menu of different projects that are in need of funds. K chose a donation of books to a local  grade school which would give them the opportunity to read about a different cultural perspective.  In this case it was the book Three Cups of Tea by Greg Mortensen and David Oliver Revin–the story of  a man’s mission to build a school in Pakistan and how it turned into fifty-five schools.  Yesterday K got a package of cards from the kids.  What an awesome gift!!

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Afternoon in Hawaii Kai

The other weekend we met K’s friend Jeremy at the Koko Marina Center’s Starbucks. We were picking up K’s keyboard which he had loaned Jeremy and in return we got a gift bag of organic awesomeness:

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Here they are later in our house.  It was like a bottomless bag:

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I asked him where he did his grocery shopping and aside from Wholefoods he mentioned a place called Kale’s Natural Food.  He also told us about a website that was a great resource for home remedies. We spent 3 hours at that Starbucks which is a record for me since coming here.

This is currently my favorite thing from the batch.  It’s delicious with oatmeal and bananas for breakfast:

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Koko Marina Center is big-time compared to Kailua.  It’s very fancy and has lots of stores like Bubbie’s Ice Cream and a multiplex.  Part of the reason I wanted to check it out was because Laura from Lily Lotus had said that there was a good teacher at Hawaii Kai’s Bikram studio.

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We found the studio tucked away on the second floor but it was in session so we couldn’t go in.  I read online that it’s the only bikram place in Oahu that uses infrared heat.  It looks very quaint and clean from the outside.   At some point one morning I’ll drive over there and take a class.

Driving to Hawaii Kai you pass right through Waimanalo and its stunning beach.  I tried to get a picture when we were driving home but this is the best I could get:

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Hot!

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Well.  It took me a total of three hours but I walked to Kailua Shopping Center to take a yoga class at Bikram Yoga Kailua.  It wasn’t bad.  The sky is gray today so I can imagine that on a sunnier day the walk would be pleasant.  But I didn’t mind–the street wasn’t busy and I caught up on my Left, Right, and Center podcast.

In all my time doing yoga I’ve always steered clear of Bikram (hot) yoga.  I tend to overheat quickly and I thought the style would be bad for my knees.  Surprisingly, I felt stronger after class.  My knees felt less sore or tender.  I don’t know that that’s one of the benefits of Bikram.  For example, Iyengar yoga is meant to be more rehabilitative and good for the injured.  Bikram, like Ashtanga, always seemed similar in that their suited for people in tip top shape. Contrary to all of that, being hot made my joints more supple.  The class pace is slow and not very intense (except for the sweat pouring off you).  I liked it.  I signed up for the new student offer 30 days for $30.  That’s even better than Open Space!

The format for class is a little weird.  The room is small.  The teacher talks you through the class sometimes demonstrating if you’re having trouble.  But the weird thing is that she uses a headset–as in a microphone.  Like Madonna.  It was funny but it makes sense.  You shouldn’t be struggling to hear the teacher.  The other thing is that you face a full wall mirror the whole time.  I was wary at first but then I liked being able to make adjustments based on how I looked and not just how I felt.

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Last night Sarah and i took class at Manoa Yoga Center.  My picture makes it look like a prison complex but Manoa is so lovely.  A very picturesque residential area.  We took class with Ray, one of the owners.  He’s certainly the most experienced teacher I’ve had class with here in Hawaii.  I think we’ll go back again, mainly to take a more intermediate class.

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Sarah showed me Punahou School where she, Sean (and Obama!) went to highschool.  There’s a carnival coming up at the school organized by the junior class and staffed by students, alum, and parents.  It sounds so fun- food and rides in Manoa!

Oh Bama

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This is my last post before Obama becomes President.  After the election my rabid enthusiasm dwindled but in the last few hours I’ve begun to feel emotional about tomorrow.  It’s an exciting time: New Year,  MLK day, the Inauguration, K’s birthday, and then Monday is the start of Lunar New Year–like a categorical clean slate.

Sarah and I have gone to yoga at Open Space everyday since Saturday.  I’m amazed at how easily I’ve been able to relax back into it.  The great thing about Open Space is that the teachers are very present, skilled, and you feel that they really want to help you.  It seems like a good mix of skill levels among the students.  The fact that I can’t say for sure is really a testament to how well they run their classes.  I’m not focused on other people.  I’m comfortable enough to concentrate on my own practice and not feel the self-consciousness  or competitiveness you find in lesser schools.  I miss class with Dharma but this place is very special and I’ll absorb many benefits while I’m here.

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I didn’t really understand why the school says it’s in the Historic Arts District of Chinatown but the picture above is Nu’uanu Gallery at Marks Garage one of the storefronts I passed on the way to class.  It was small but had really interesting contemporary work.  Speaking of which I wish I was in NY to visit this: Can. Did.

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When Sarah was driving me home the other day she kept asking me where to turn and I just kept yapping away forgetting to tell her how to get to my condo.  I told her it’s because I have this idea that she knows everything about Hawaii.  It seemed natural that she would know how to get me home even though she’d never been there.  Things that Sarah has shared with me that I find interesting:

and lucky Mochi for New Year to put on your dashboard.

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Finally here’s a video I really liked today.  Happy Obama Day everyone.  I pledge to be more gentle and find ways to help others in whatever way and whenever I can.

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more about “MySpace Celebrity and Katalyst presen…“, posted with vodpod

Ono–oh yes!

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Today was my last day being 34.  And if I’m going by NY time, where I was born, I’m already 35.  I was wary of spending my birthday in Hawaii seeing as most of the people dearest to me don’t live here, but it’s turning out alright– like being on a retreat.  At least that’s how I’m trying to think of it.

My first trip back to NY was at the end of November.   I went home because my best friend and mentor was dying of pancreatic cancer.  I was able to spend the last two weeks of her life with her.  It’s not easy to bring up or even think about. I felt that the holidays weren’t going to be festive or celebratory in light of this, and they weren’t.  They were bittersweet and in a way it seems right that I spend my birthday far away from the city that I love and the comforts of home.

With that said, K has been sweet to me all day. We spent it eating good food and taking it very easy.  Tomorrow he’s taking me to my favorite place for dinner:  Sassabune.  Can’t ask for much more than that.

I hoped we’d be able to go to the beach today because it had been weeks since we’ve gone swimming.  Partly because of life issues but mostly because of the heavy rain.  K and I ran errands in the morning and decided to see if the sun would come out in the afternoon.

We had some business at Long’s and while we were looking for envelopes we ended up in the Sanrio aisle.  K pointed out a couple of cute characters and asked me if I’d like them as Birthday Friends.  I quickly said Yes and now have two terribly cute companions highly appropriate for hugging (see photo above).  Outside of Long’s we got a whiff of plate lunch and decided to try and find some.  I mentioned the Indian truck by the post office and K said it looked shady ( I think that’s the unHawaiian in us).  Then I remembered the little tent in the Kailua Shopping Center but when we got there it wasn’t up.  So we settled on some Aloha Salads.  I had the Ono Isalnd Ahi Salad and K had the Tiger Shrimp salad.  My salad reminded me of the furakake at Nico’s.  Not quite as good but very good anyway.  We got smoothies at Lanikai Juice and we ate our lunch at one of the outdoor tables in the parking lot.

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I had a Kailua Monkey from Lanikai Juice which really hit the spot–basically a banana and peanut butter smoothie.  It was a fantastic lunch and I enjoyed sitting outside with K despite the cars coming in and out and sitting next to an SUV. It’s funny the spaces people create for themselves.  The outdoor tables at Kailua Shopping Center remind me of my old job.  I used to work at a museum and the first time I visited it for my interview I thought, how do people exist here.  It seemed like an alley way–not an office.  But after going there everyday for two years you carve out a space for yourself and your perspective changes, I suppose in order to maintain your sanity.  That’s what the outdoor tables are like: you look at them and you think how do people sit out here and eat when there are exhaust fumes everywhere and people walking by to get to their cars.  Anyway, despite this I enjoyed it.  It was nice to sit outside in the almost sun and eat a great salad.

After lunch we went to the beach to see if it was warm enough to swim.  It wasn’t.  We walked along the shore instead.  At Kailua beach we normally go to one of two spots, both within a few hundred feet of each other.  Today we walked way down the beach in the direction of Kalapawai Market.  It was strange to see how much of the beach was washed away from the storms.  I’m not sure if that’s normal–but the gnarly roots of gigantic trees were all exposed because of the lost sand bed.

We walked more than a mile down the beach.  We got to the point where the beach curves and is lined with mostly private residences some of which had no trespassing signs.  It was so quiet, smooth, and calm.  I told Ken that it must be like living in a clamshell for those people.  I thought we were going to go swimming so I didn’t bring my camera but tomorrow on my birthday I’ll go take a walk and update this with some pictures.

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After being here for four months we FINALLY made it to the Kailua Farmer’s Market this evening.  It was AWESOME.  I was so excited.  I was so impatient as K tried to find parking in the majorly packed parking lot.  I was almost hyperventilating.  K said we must be really pitiful if I’m so excited about going to a Farmer’s Market.  He said I was never excited about the Union Square Farmer’s Market and it’s at least four or five times bigger than Kailua’s.  And my response was does Union Square have this:

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or THESE:

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There was so much to buy.  We ended up buying some vegan poke, organic veggies, a couple of plate dinners, flowers, coffee, taro mochi, apple bananas, lumpia,  and chocolate syrup.

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It was a great day.  And tomorrow I’ll be 35.

Kauai Not and the Big Picture

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We were on our way to Kauai.  It was going to be our first excursion to one of the other islands. We booked our flights, our car, and our room at the Hanalei Surfboard House.  We were so excited to visit Hanalei Bay and try one of the uber muddy hikes.  We spent one whole day shopping for our trip, picking up clothes we could get grubby in.   K got a great pair of hiking shoes from Nordstroms.  He even put them on at the mall to start breaking them in.

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We had to try different places for my hiking shoes and found a great place suggested by the Nordstrom salesperson: Mauka to Makai.  Their inventory was low so I ended up with a decent pair from Sports Authority.

Unfortunately when we got home  K was called into work for the next few days so we had to cancel all of our plans.  Hopefully we’ll be able to go before the holidays.

Instead of visiting a luxurious vacation island, we went to a couple of movies to unwind.  We settled for Journey to the Center of the Earth at the dollar theater. Dollar did you say??? Yes we were shocked. I haven’t been to a dollar movie in at least 10 years.  And I’m not even sure it was a dollar I think it might have been two.  The crowd at Hollywood Restaurant Row 9 was a pretty rowdy crowd.  Lots of locals and lots of kids.  I mean I felt like we watched a show before the actual show.  I whispered to K during the cartoon previews that we could leave at any point if it ended up not being good.

The movie proved to be perfectly fun.  In NY I carefully choose theaters based on the fact that I know it’s a  neighborhood crowd and people won’t be chattering through the whole thing.  I was a little skeptical at Hollywood.  Particularly when an older Hawaiian couple plopped down next to us and started talking right away.  But a quarter of the way into the movie I gasped at a heart racing scene and the portly woman next to me immediately whispered ‘what?’.  I was immediately won over and didn’t mind that they talked through the whole movie.

This past weekend we got to see Quantum of Solace.  Which I loved.  In looking for a theater we discovered Winward Mall in Kaneohe which is so different from Ala Moana.  The mall reminded me of my Long Island roots.  It was fantastic.  We had lunch at IHOP and wandered the mall after seeing the movie.  The highlight for me was the pet shop–very diverse.  I think all pet shops in general are, to varying degrees, not good.  But I’m a sucker for baby animals.  Here is one of my favorites:

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Also, note for the future. There was a Leonards Malasadas truck in the Winward Mall parking lot.