Disclaimer: I had every intention of creating a well-rounded photographic representation of Maui, but Haleakala just stole the show :) The other photographs of the island looked rather sad standing next to hers, haha! So I've decided to post them to Instagram instead, where they can be appreciated and not mocked :P Feel free to follow me at @kimberlydam.
Maui. Maui is interesting. Contrasting. Intriguing. Fickle. Surprising. In other words, homeboy is young, spirited and highly impressionistic. A teenager. Running rampant! Haha! All joking aside, unfortunately, tourism greatly affects the character of Maui, so the presence of the Hawaiian culture and spirit is harder to see, hear and feel. This includes the use and reference to Hawaiian language and folklore. I can't help but feel a little sad for Maui. He seems a little lost. I can only hope in time, he finds his way back to his roots. Maybe you can help him in the quest. I'm sure I saw him. A few times. Upon majestic Haleakala at sunrise. Roaming the mysterious east side filled with unpaved roads and lush rolling farmland. Eating at a roadside Hawaiian barbecue stand. Hugging a tree in the bamboo forest. Standing in the mist of spectacular waterfalls. And leaving little "signs" everywhere.
P.S. After I had completed this post, I happened to stumble across this story about the Demi-God Maui.
"Legend has it that centuries ago there was born the demigod named Maui. The heavens were held by his father, the netherworld by his mother. Maui was said to be the smallest of the family, but what he lacked in size he made up for by being the quickest of mind. Maui also was known to be adventurous if not mischievous. Legend states how Maui was not the best when it came to fishing either, something his brothers excelled at and teased him about due to his lack of success.
Maui, in revenge, would sometimes use his wiliness to fill his boat with his brother's fish. He would pull his boat close enough to his brother's so that when they got a fish he could distract them and use his line to snag their fish. At first, Maui's brothers were in awe of his ability but eventually they caught on and refused to take him fishing. Seeing that her son was very upset, Maui's mother sent him to his father to get a magic fish hook. She said, "Go to your father. There you will receive the hook called Manaiakalani, the hook fastened to the heavens. When the hook catches land, it will raise the old seas together."
"So Maui went to his father and returned with the hook and asked his brothers to let him join in another fishing expedition. They laughed at him and threw him off the boat - but they returned with no catch. Maui scolded them, saying that if they had allowed him to join in on the fishing, they would have more success. So, figuring they had nothing to lose, the brothers allowed Maui to join them in their canoe for another chance. They paddled far from the aina (land) and threw their hooks into the sea. To their dismay, they only were able to catch sharks. The brothers mocked Maui asking, "Where are the fish you promised, our brother?"
So Maui, confident with his magic hook, rose and threw it into the ocean. He chanted a power prayer and commanded the hook to catch the Great Fish below. The ocean began to move, the waves chopped at the boat, and swells rose up around them. Maui quickly instructed his brothers to paddle with all their might and not look back. For two whole days Maui held the line tight, his brothers all the while paddling as furiously as they could. Suddenly from below the depths of the ocean arose the tops of great mountains in a series of peaks that broke the surface of the ocean. Maui shouted for his brothers to paddle harder and not look back while he pulled against the line and forced the peak's even farther out of the water. But alas, one of his brothers couldn't resist; he had to look. And as he gazed back in awe at the sight before Maui's hook he dropped his paddle, the line began to slacken, and before he could call out to his brothers, the line snapped and the magic hook was lost forever beneath the sea.
Maui shouted at his brothers, "I had endeavored to raise a great continent but because of your weakness I have only these islands to show for all my efforts."
And today we find the Hawaiian Islands just as Maui left them those long, long years ago.
Maui's adventures did not stop with the magic hook, however. After raising the islands from the sea Maui settled with his mother, Hina, in the town of Hana on Maui. There she worked on her tapa cloth, frustrated at how the cloth never could dry in the short hours of the day.
So, Maui set off on a quest to strike a deal with La, the sun. La had been being lazy, always in a rush to get back to bed. Maui had noticed that La always rose off the rim of Haleakala Crater, so Maui climbed to the top of Mount Haleakala, weaved a rope using some strong ie'ie vines, and as La raced across the sky Maui snared him down from the Kaupo Gap on Haleakala summit.
Maui made a deal with La for him to "walk" more slowly and steadily across the sky each day - a little faster in the winter, a little slower in the summer. And, thus, today we can thank Maui for our present length of daylight hours."
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