Reminder of Ho'oponopono: A Hawaiian art of healing through forgiving. My memories of Kahuna Newton Hitchcock. Inspired by an archive post from Cobra
Cobra wrote this in a post from 2015:
"Forgiveness is easy if you understand that everybody on this planet had some really traumatic experiences in this or any of the previous lifetimes. Each individual reacts upon those experiences in a unique way. To release the past and learn from it is the key to the new reality. We need to start focusing on how to make things work in the new society. Forgiveness will open a flow of cosmic Love upon the surface of this planet and this energy is exactly what the advanced extraterrestrial races need to anchor their ships here after the First Contact."
ME: I have been reading through Cobra's archives as I have missed many posts over the years. I also wanted to view things from my current consciousness, and maybe pick up on information that may have slipped by my concentration. This exert from a post of Cobra's from 2015 caught my eye, my heart, and reminded me of...
I was reminded of Ho'oponopono. To practice Ho'oponopono, state with full intention the following affirmations:
I LOVE YOU, I AM SORRY, PLEASE FORGIVE ME. THANK YOU.
Since I am thinking about Hawaii and The Hawaiian culture at this moment, realize that at their roots, Aloha means Love, and Mahalo means Gratitude. The Kahuna is a healer. Such a beautiful culture Hawaii, descended from MU. A culture of love gratitude, and forgiveness... A culture with much Christ consciousness. During the early 1980's, when I was in early grade school, my Mother was close friends with an absolutely gigantic, wonderful, warm, Hawaiian Man named Newton Hitchcock. I remember going to his families extraordinarily fun Luaus at his home in Vancouver, Washington. There was always a long stretch of tables placed together full of rich, scrumptious foods. The adults and kids all would line up for the limbo dance and take turns cheering each other on seeing how low we could backbend and shimmy under the ever lowering stick. Women would always win this game! lol I really loved Newton. He was always so joyful and happy, with one of the brightest of smiles. He would sometimes tell stories to the kids about MU, and the colorful fish, turtles and sharks in the water around the islands. His words were so colorful, magical to us as kids, and to the adults too. Newton likely weighed around 400 lbs and was also several inches taller than my Father. We were crushed when Newton Hitchcock, descendant of Hawaiian Kahunas, made his transition in 1989 at the age of just 37. Rip Newton, my BIG Brother.
Mahalo,
JK