Village Gate
Hunamail 2007
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Sharing
HUNA MAIL
updated on the first of January, March, May, July, September and November
Hi,
Your web site is an inspiration to all. Thank you for it.
Peace Profound,
Andy, UK
Dear Serge,
Thank you for your answers to my questions about reality. I'll appreciate the gift you have given me in this personal answer, in your book, and in the lessons I learn from Huna.
Be blessed on all your ways!
Aloha,
Jens, Germany
Aloha,
I moved from Hawaii to the mainland several years ago and now am a bodywork practitioner. I have been practicing since 1998 and now going into Chinese Tuina massage.
However, I have read several articles on Lomilomi and I need to share with you that they embody what I feel deep within myself. It is totally the Aloha Spirit! The Spirit of Hawaii is something truly blessed. It is a bond that travels through all differences, not better, just different. And it makes a great ohana. When I saw that the way I feel put in words and shared by others in my field and those that are still in Hawaii, I felt my heart leap and loving arms like a hug embraced me. At that moment I felt blessed and unified with the SPIRIT!
I am very much interested in learning to be able to share the love and aloha with others through healthy touch and a sense of goodness. I look forward to learning more of the gifts and values of HUNA. Perhaps you can put me in touch with a dvd that would allow me to start the next step in my journey of Hawaiian bodywork - Lomilomi I think would be great! Mahalo!
Malama ia oe,
O.K.A, New Jersey
Hi,
I enjoyed reading about the origin of the word kahuna. This morning when my wife asked what the word meant I said that it is Hawaiian and it probably means a big mountain -- I was making a connection between the usage as referring to a prominent person and the prominent feature of the landscape (mountain). Your explanation that it means an oven or keeper of oven fits my impression. The connection to oven is the phenomenon of volcanoes, probably the term oven in Hawaiian got its name from the volcano in the landscape, which probably came before any oven was ever invented. By the way, in Persian (in which mahi means fish), the word for mountain is kuh.
Best regards,
G. M., email
Dear Dr King,
Thank you for the Aloha booklet. It is absolutely beautiful. I love everything you said and have been wanting to study Lomi Lomi for some time. The Huna quest sounds incredibleÉThank you for explaining Aloha so beautifully.
I send Blessings to you and the Aloha project,
Love,
Gayatri, Canada
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