Huna Workshops
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Huna We’re here on this Earth plane or university to learn, and each of us is seeking new ways of learning, becoming more “spiritual” as we evolve in this purification cycle. In our eagerness, we sometimes forget that we are here as spirit, learning the human experience, not the human trying to be spirit. I once heard Hugh Lynn Cayce, son of Edgar Cayce, speak at a conference. He talked about the pressures we put on ourselves to be more spiritually evolved. We want to see auras by Wednesday, read people’s futures by next Tuesday, heal the sick by the third Thursday and, at the very least, be Jesus Christ by the end of the month. Huna is a way for us to work with our humanity in resolving issues, blockages and problems that prevent us from functioning to our full potential, spiritually and in our every day world. One of the prime concepts of Huna is that “effectiveness is the measure of truth.” In other words, use what is apparently effective for you to help you find your way—that is your truth. Huna may be effective for you in clearing your path. Huna is a philosophy of living in balance with all things and all beings in this world, especially yourself. It provides the basis for a multi-dimensional healing method used to assist you in restoring this balance. It utilizes hypnosis (specifically past life regression), to release issues and activate personal power. Huna dates back to ancient times, as far back as Mu and Atlantis, and is recorded in ancient Egyptian history. Huna, in Hawaiian, means “the secret”. The secret that it refers to is the knowledge that we form and reform our personal world experience. Since we create our world, we can recreate it. In Huna, the world is what you think it is. The only limits we have are those we place upon ourselves. We have the ability to create because energy follows thought, so energy will be directed where your attention is. The cornerstone of Huna is love. It is through love that we are all connected and that we connect with God. Our power comes from within and is a result of staying in the present. If you focus on the present, trust that your decisions are good ones and expect that things will work out well, you’re living the Huna way. In Huna philosophy there are three selves, the subconscious (Unihipili), the conscious (Uhane), and the Superconscious (Aumakua). The subconscious, or low self, is our memory and communicates with the conscious mind through dreams, imagination, feelings and physical sensations. The conscious, or middle self, provides our awareness, desires, thoughts and the ability to communicate. It gives our lives purpose, meaning, and direction. The Superconscious or higher self, gives guidance and inspiration. Some call it the parental spirit, source, guardian or God within. The conscious and subconscious must agree or relate in their beliefs or conflicts, complexes or blockages may be created that manifest in behavior that is counter productive and other than what we consciously intend. The Huna philosophy provides a method, through altered states of consciousness, to access your subconscious mind and work with it to release blockages, resolve inner conflict and then reprograms the subconscious with new patterns. Once you decide consciously what you want to do, and get the subconscious to agree, the Superconscious makes available an abundance of ideas, energy and knowledge to accomplish what you want. The Superconscious communicates with us the same way the conscious and subconscious do. In most cases the blockages are created when our primary needs for survival, companionship, love, purpose, personal control and pleasure are not met. As we become angered that our needs aren’t being met, complexes develop that can lead to depression and sometimes addiction or other habits that act as coping mechanisms.
Huna works with original cause, you can find out what made it
necessary for you to create these blockages and work to remove them. You
need to get to the point where you can say your are Not a victim, but
created this situation for yourself. Once you claim ownership and take
responsibility, you can release, resolve and heal. Huna is effective in
identifying original cause, releasing and empowering ourselves.
The Novice Healer On my lurching way toward wholeness of body, mind and spirit, I “accidentally” bumped into Universal Life Center (ULC) and the Rev. Jason L Oliver on March 15, 1994. On that day a Reiki class that my friend, Connie Coomes, and I had been anticipating for six long weeks was supposed to have commenced. However, at the last minute we learned it had been canceled. “It just wasn’t meant to be,” we told each other, gulping back our disappointment, “we weren’t meant to be healers.” We sought comfort and consolation at our favorite bookstore, Spiral Circle. While there, Connie picked up a ULC calendar and suggested we go check out the center. Still in the clutches of gloom, I only half-heartedly agreed. From the literature I expected the center to be something like a university. I was surprised to find a house, and I didn’t know what to make of it. But when I say the sign on the back door — Welcome Home — something inside me leapt for joy. I inquired about the Huna Life Force Healing class that was coming up, and asked about it compared to Reiki. Satisfied that it was the same energy from the same source, we decided to climb aboard. The first class was held on April 5. It was interesting, especially the part where Suzi, a novice like myself, made my head feel like it expanded to the size of a medicine ball. Later, I was gratified when Suzi told me I had channeled warm, golden light through her. As I said, it was interesting. But I in no way felt myself a healer. A couple of days later, Connie, in a spurt of frustration, back-kicked a door. The result was an ankle so swollen that the bones on either side were obscured. The injury was painful and even a feathery touch elicited cries of anguish from my friend. Connie asked me to use Huna Life Force on her foot. I didn’t know if it could be of any help to her, but I was pretty sure I couldn’t hurt her with my lack of expertise, so I agreed to try. Immediately, I realized I didn’t know what I was doing. I had no more than a cursory knowledge of anatomy, so I felt I couldn’t direct energy to any particular spot, not knowing what that spot might be. Also, I couldn’t recall the words of the prayer Rev. Oliver had given us in class. In the end, I sat with her foot in my lap, my hands hovering over it, asking God to send loving, healing light through me and into the foot. At one point as I hovered over the foot, I thought I saw a lump elongate and smooth out. “It must be your active imagination,” I chided myself. After awhile I felt I could touch the foot, and I gently lowered my hands to it, alert for any yelps of pain. When none were forthcoming, I became more confident. We didn’t check the time, but it may have been thirty minutes into the “treatment” when my patient Said that her foot felt much better. We decided to let her try it out. Lo and behold! She could put weight on it! But it wasn’t well. It still hurt in the back, in the heel area. Comparing her injured foot to the other one, I noted that the heel bone was sticking out in an odd manner. We sat back down. The foot was back in my lap, but this time I cradled the heel in my left hand, with my thumb resting on top of the ankle. I could see no part of my hand, except my thumb, and my thumb was moving. Glowing a yellowish-green and moving. Connie was repeatedly saying that my hand was sinking into her ankle, and I was asking her how my thumb could be moving when it was perfectly still. We were amazed, totally captivated with what was occurring, knowing for sure and certain that we weren’t doing anything but sitting there in the kitchen. Suddenly, I felt the heel bone, which had been resting on my hand, pull away from my palm. Her foot did not move, but the bone, apparently , was drawn back into its proper place. When I checked her feet again, the injured heel seemed to protrude even less than the other one. And not only could Connie stand on her no-longer-injured foot, she could walk on it, dance, kick up her heels - it was a miracle! But it was a natural miracle of the type that could and should occur every day. To me, the implications of what I had just taken part in were mind-boggling. If a student with just one class under her belt can do this, what does it say about current medical practices? Now, I have two classes to my credit. Do I consider myself a healer or someone with special gifts? Not in the least. After all, all I did was sit in a chair and hold a foot in my lap. Oh, yes, there was one other thing I did — I called on God.
Huna Prayer
If I have hurt someone today
If I can take those steps again,
And if a hurt has struck me deep
Parental Spirits whom I love,
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copyright 2001-2003 laura e