Huna Article
          Huna International
           
          Human Cycles by Serge Kahili King
          
            In the world around us we can see the operation of all kinds of cycles, events that follow a repeating
            sequence of connected activity. The changing of the seasons is one example, the movement of water from
            liquid to vapor to liquid again is another, and so are the cycles of day and night and the changing phases
            of the moon. Some people believe in a cycle of life, death, and rebirth, but since that is not so easily
            demonstrated, it has to remain a theory for most other people.
           
          
            There are two significant characteristics of a cycle that are of interest here. One is the repetition of
            experiences, and the other is the uniqueness of those repetitions.
           
          
            Year after year, in temperate climates, we can experience the sequence of spring, summer, fall and winter.
            But every season is different every year whether in different locations or the same ones, and, in spite of
            the arbitrary dates of the solstices and equinoxes, every season starts and ends according to the whims of
            Nature. In the animal world we can observe cycles of migration, of hibernation, and physical changes of skin
            and fur and color. Yet, even though the same animals are involved, each experience in the sequence is always
            different, both for individual animals and for different animals of the same group.
           
          
            There are cycles in the lives of human beings, too, some dramatic and some more subtle.
           
          
            Probably the most dramatic and influential of these cycles for women is the menstrual cycle, because it
            involves not only physical changes, but emotional and mental changes as well. And those personal changes may
            have dramatic effects on other people, too.
           
          
            In my experience and study of many cultures around the world I've found that this powerful cycle does not
            affect all women in the same way. While the same basic physical changes occur, emotional and mental
            reactions to those changes can vary tremendously. These reactions, of course, then affect the physical
            reactions to the basic changes. While the experience of individual women in the same culture can vary
            greatly, the modern, Western assumption that the period of menses is always a time of great stress is simply
            not a reality in some other cultures. Cultural attitudes about it can have a very strong effect on the
            personal experience. In some cultures the period is treated with shame and fear, in others as a mere
            inconvenience, and in others as a time of culminating female power.
           
          
            Physical changes, even the most natural ones, always create a certain amount of stress, because it is a
            natural response of the body to resist change. The degree of stress that an individual woman experiences
            during menses, however, depends partly on her attitudes about it, and partly on the amount of stress she is
            currently experiencing from other sources. The more stress she is under for whatever reason when menses
            occurs, the more strongly her body will react to it.
           
          
            The more or less monthly cycle of menses happens within a larger cycle that doesn't have a specific name.
            This one starts with the onset of menses at puberty and repeats itself with the onset of menopause. Although
            very different in detail, both are part of a human cycle of physical change.
           
          
            The start of menstruation, called menarche, normally occurs between the ages of 8 to 16 (12 is just an
            average). Menopause is said to occur between the ages of 45 to 55, with individual differences, of course.
            Some women experience what is called "perimenopause" for several years before the major changes of menopause
            appear, and this is when "hot flashes" may start. Although "hot flashes" are associated with menopause also,
            not all women have them. Since many men may not know what these are, I'll explain that they are "episodes of
            flushing with a sensation of heat that may or may not include sweating, and are often accompanied by
            palpitations and sometimes followed by chills...Hot flashes are most common during the first 3 years after
            menopause...and...50% to 90% of postmenopausal women experience hot flashes (source:
            www.knowmenopause.com)." These figures were based on studies of Australian women over a period of seven
            years.
           
          
            What is of interest for us at this point of the article is that the hot flash symptoms of menopause are
            identical to symptoms brought about by other forms of stress. At various times in my life, even as a young
            man, I have had the same types of symptoms, the most alike being when I was suffering from bouts of malaria.
            And I only suffered from those bouts of malaria when I was also under a great deal of stress from other
            sources. The inevitable conclusion, based on my ideas about stress, naturally, is that the symptoms of
            menopause, and all other symptoms of cyclic change, are due to a natural resistance to those changes
            compounded by an excessively high level of stress tension from other causes.
           
          
            Since this is an article on human cycles, we can assume that men have cycles that are similar to those of
            women. Male puberty is an obvious place to start, since it begins at roughly the same age period as does
            that of women. Although the cyclic changes that follow are not nearly as obvious as those that women have,
            from personal experience and conversations with many other males I can vouch for the fact that men
            definitely do have cyclic periods of sexual arousal that differ in period and intensity for different men.
            And there is a growing body of scientific evidence that men experience a close equivalent of menopause,
            called "andropause" or "viropause," between the ages of 40 to 55 (with exceptions). Here are some of the
            typical symptoms that have come out of studies (source: www.midlife-passages.com):
           
            - Hot flashes and sleep disturbances
 
            - Fatigue, loss of a sense of well being
 
            - Depression
 
            - Joint aches and stiffness of hands
 
            - Irritability and anger
 
            - Reduced libido
 
            - Reduced potency
 
            - Changes in hair growth and skin quality
 
           
          
          
            If it sounds similar to what women go through, it's because the relationship between the testis,
            testosterone, the brain and the pituitary gland is the same as the relationship between the ovaries,
            estrogen, the brain, and the pituitary gland. And, exactly as with women, the intensity of the symptoms
            corresponds to the ongoing level of stress tension that each individual is experiencing.
           
          
            The conclusions are three: 
            1. Men and women have very similar cycles of life changes. 
            2. The more you do to relieve stress tension of any kind, throughout your life, the less troublesome these
            natural life changes will be. 
            3. If you are already in your menopause/andropause phase, the more you do to relieve stress tension of any
            kind NOW, the less troublesome these natural life changes will be.
           
          Pi'i ka nalu, he'e ka nalu, ke nalu nei ka moana 
            Waves rise, waves recede, the ocean is full of waves 
            (a play on nalu, which means "wave" and "to ponder something." Therefore, another translation could
            be "Thoughts come, thoughts go, there are many things to think about")
           
          
            P.S. Click here for a technique to deal with hot flashes.
           
          Copyright Huna International 2006
           
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