A new year’s resolution: Let’s focus on faith, hope and aloha the natural way

Gold-dust day geckos do their part to eat garden insects and are a joy to watch. (Voltaire Moise/Special to West Hawaii Today)
Subscribe Now Choose a package that suits your preferences.
Start Free Account Get access to 7 premium stories every month for FREE!
Already a Subscriber? Current print subscriber? Activate your complimentary Digital account.

Have you noticed that a walk in the forest or time spent in the garden brings a sense of peace? It is a way to get back to our natural roots. Seriously, hugging a tree can help one feel a sense of connection with the Earth.

Most folks say they hope for “Peace on Earth” especially at this season when that message is loud and clear. Many also wish for a Happy New Year. The question is what is happy and what is peace. 2020 was a difficult year with many folks suffering from COVID-19 and economic difficulties.

To some, having more material wealth is what apparently makes them happy. A recently released book by Mary Trump, “Too Much And Never Enough” does a good job describing this condition. To others, knowing that real wealth is being spiritually in harmony with humanity, a higher power and the natural environment.

Spending time traveling and hanging out with regular folks leads to the realization that being at peace and happy has little to do with material wealth. You can meet many folks who would be considered poor, but don’t see themselves that way. It is more about having a strong spiritual foundation, family and community connections.

Most folks in Southeast Asia and Japan for example, believe in the teachings of Buddha that are in many ways compareable to the teachings of Jesus. The rich Hindu prince Siddhartha gave up his wealth and meditated for years until he reached “enlightenment” under the shade of a bo tree or Ficus religiosa. He gave up his material wealth. This is reminiscent of the teachings of Jesus quoted in the new testament chapters of Mark and Luke going something like this: I tell you the truth. It is hard for a rich man to enter the kingdom of Heaven. Again I tell you, it is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the Kingdom of God.

Wow, that is heavy! However the concept is repeated in the Babylonian Talmud, Quran, Old Testament and basically all the major religions. In more modern times, some have promoted the concept that the richer one becomes is proof of God’s blessings. Unfortunately it seems that the more we have, the more we desire more.

After being in several so called third world countries last year, we were reminded that being poor is a classification based a country whose citizens have a low annual income or gross domestic product. We visited Myanmar, considered one of the poorest countries in Asia. Most folks are devout Buddhists, and do not necessarily see themselves as poor. The average income per capita is around $1300 per year. Many are subsistence farmers and at the same time live almost sustainably using agricultural practices of their ancestors.

As long as they have food, home and health, they profess to be living happy and peaceful lives. This does necesserily hold true in big cities like Mandalay and Yangon, where modern influences have created a hectic consumer culture.

Perhaps the key to peace and happiness is that it should be coupled with faith, hope and the greatest power of all, Aloha. The world’s great religions place the importance of loving one another, our creator and creation itself. There are those who distort the message for political, economic, power or control. Some even place themselves and their group above others and this leads to unresolvable conflict misery.

The question is, can Aloha help us to have ethnicity without ethnocentricity? Can we appreciate that we are unique without putting down someone else. It is so easy to fall into the “us and them” mode of thinking that it takes constant mental pushups to see all humans as connected. We may even expand that connection to all living things. One way to practice is by noting our attitudes about other inhabitants of our global ecosystem.

For example, let’s take a look at our beautiful Hawaiian gardens. They are composed of plants from all over the world. Some of these plants arrived long ago transported by ocean currents, winds and birds. Hundreds of varieties were brought here by the first human inhabitants. These include kukui, coconut, ti, breadfruit, banana, sweet potato and many others. Later, each group brought the plants associated with their culture.

When it comes to our gardens we may then see things differently. We see that it is essential to protect what is unique to Hawaii, but simply labeling life forms as native versus alien and then to infer that one is good and thus the other must be bad is a disservice to all. Our gardens give us opportunity to do our mental pushups and acknowledge the value of each of the diverse life forms including insects, lizards, frogs and birds.

Most non-native plants introduced purposely have benefited man. With diversified agriculture essential for our economic survival, it is important we don’t hamstring ourselves so that we are unable to grow a crop that is of benefit to our community and economy by maligning all non native species. Our responsibility is to recognize that our communities include many other life forms, most of which are unique and need our special protection, and at the same time to recognize the need for non native species including those introduced by the Polynesians and other ethnic groups.

The message for our future is that it is time for all members of our island community, including environmental groups, agricultural interests, visitor industry, politicians and others to work together on plans that focus on good management of our resources. It is not a time to be confrontational. We can learn to manage our polarities if we can shift our patterns of thinking. There is a lesson to be learned in how we treat all the varied life forms in our island gardens. Maybe if we learn that garden lesson, we will treat one another better! It is the essence of Aloha.

Our New Year’s resolution can be to see the spark of good in all things and in all people, even though we don’t necessarily like some of them. My personal resolution is to conciously do three good deeds a day. It might be simply sharing a smile or planting a tree. Maybe going further and trying not to eat animals is another step to attempt. Even though 2020 was the worst year in recent history, let’s make 2021 the best by living Aloha.