The tour I was following concluded at the Neil Blaisdell Center in Honolulu. A place I know by it’s prior name, the Honolulu International Center, or HIC. I used to go see the Ice Capades there when I was small, and the circus, and even some musical acts like the Jackson Five and the Osmonds.
A few years ago I was following a different band, sort of an alternative jam band from the nineties. They had a lot of cool people in their fandom and I hit it off with some of them. Until one day I found myself in a monumentally stupid argument with the non-binary offspring of one of the band members.
This was right after the Lahaina fire. I was being sad on social media, when suddenly this person appears in my comments, angrily informing me that I am not allowed to mourn for Lahaina, or even visit Hawai’i, because I am an evil colonizer.
After this exchange I found myself unable to appreciate that band anymore. The dude I once respected as a freewheeling poet had suddenly morphed into a drugged-out loser who couldn’t be bothered to do any parenting after spawning a psychopath who appeared to be missing a few empathy-related chromosomes.
I also feel like that was the moment when I completely cut my ties with the angry left, who were following what they thought were hivemind marching orders regarding how to think about Hawai’i that originated with a conspiracy meme spread by a real estate speculator trying to scare people away and buy their land cheap. I note that exactly one month later, the Gaza attack happened, and the same people moved to denouncing the Israel side as evil colonizers – it’s like the rage was already there, it was just waiting for a current event to move into the next available parking spot.
I had Palestinian friends back in the nineties. I’m aware of what has been going down. My opinion on Middle East politics is that I’m generally in favor of minimized killing but I accept that this is a place with thousands of years of history and culture which I could never understand without years of focused study, and my related opinions are not worth much.
I do have a few opinions about Hawai’i. I haven’t been studying it intensely for years but I was born there, in the sixties, on Maui. At the time, the island population consisted of approximately thirty thousand people, most of them involved in growing rice and sugar. There was no tourist industry yet and Kaanapali was undeveloped. The few tourists interested in Maui stayed in Lahaina, at the Pioneer Inn.
My dad was the manager at the S.H. Kress store, which was sort of like Woolworth, or Target, or Long’s without the drugs. He wore aloha shirts to work. We lived in a house next door to a farm, and the highlight of my toddler day was watching the cows get led between the pasture and the barn. Our dog, a black laborador-boxer cross named Winnie, would bark excitedly to let me know the show was happening.
When I was about four, we moved to Wahiawa, in central Oahu, which was big and crowded compared to sleepy Maui. We spent a few years there. My teenage cousin came out for an extended visit due to family trouble; she attended Lelehua High School and was always bringing her teenager friends over to play Beatles records. Without realizing she was starting a little addict on a lifetime of chasing musical highs.
We acquired my brother when I was five. Like me, he was adopted. That was right around the time I started kindergarten.
My childhood was complicated beyond my toddler years. I was spoiled. Morbidly obese in kindergarten. All the toys I wanted. My parents acquired me when they were in their mid-thirties and smothered me with attention.
My dad, Cecil (just like the sea serpent), had a mean grumpy mom, a series of stepfathers, and a younger brother, John, who was smart at math, and got into IBM way back in the fifties. And had a normal name too. Older brother Cecil served in the Navy during the Korean War and fell in love with Hawai’i, and moved there after the war was over. He wasn’t a surfer, or a fisherman, or a boat enthusiast. He was just a dreamy impractical guy who loved to stare at the waves. He was always taking me to fanciful movies like Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, Fantasia, Arsenic and Old Lace. He took me to Lost Horizon, a musical about Shangri-La, and told me it had been his favorite story as a kid – Western woman finds her way to mysterious exotic Asian town where the people are beautiful and never age, where she falls in love. That was how he felt about Hawai’i. He genuinely liked Asian and Polynesian culture, although it was definitely from a bit of a colonizer mindset. He was more about integrating with the community than profiting from it though, which is why he stayed in retail instead of making money in the nascent computer industry.
My mom, Layla (just like the song), was unusual. Orphaned at three. Raised in a strict Texas orphanage which followed the “science” of the day, such as swapping out caregivers regularly so the children wouldn’t get attached. Extremely dependent all her life – never learned to drive, never went farther than a couple blocks to the grocery store without my dad. Family curses left and right – her genetic family carried Huntington’s Disease, as well as a certain toxic mindset. One particularly memorable example: mom’s niece refused to let her attend mom’s sister’s 100th birthday party because she didn’t belong to the same church.
And yeah, she passed that emotional abuse on. And then she’d feel guilty, and feed me a fattening treat. And tell me I was special. Better than the other kids, thanks to that 160+ IQ, not to mention the natural blonde hair. The other kids didn’t like me much, and I don’t blame them.
Later in life, I encountered my biological mother Susie (as in “Suzie Q”). A cerebral nerd who had wanted to be an anthropologist. But her dad refused to pay for her education. He did pay to put her through school to be a dental hygienist, so she did that, and then moved to Hawai’i and got a job at the Kamehameha School helping students with their teeth while attending anthropology classes at U of Hawai’i.
Fortunately for me, and not quite as fortunately for her, she encountered my dad, James (as in Bond), who served in the U.S. Navy aboard a submarine, the U.S.S. Charr.
So here’s where I get all of my names … my adopted parents named me Sharon (for Walt Disney’s adopted daughter) Leilani (for the song Sweet Leilani, composed by the bandleader at the Moana Surfrider, where I was just staying).
When I was a teenager and interested in punk rock, I determined that “Sharon” was not punk enough. However, if I changed one measly letter, I could have the much cooler name of Charon, which evoked yet another song, Sails of Charon by the Scorpions. As well as the moon of Pluto, and the ferryman from mythology, and a bunch of references in comics and science fiction. It was my stage/pen name for a while, and then I started writing and actually getting paid by checks in that name. So I did an informal name change and started working and paying taxes as Charon, and after doing that for about forty years, the Real ID laws forced me to go to court and spend five hundred dollars doing a formal name change so that my license would match my tax records rather than my birth certificate. After I had only been doing it twenty years, I learned that I had inadvertently named myself Charon after my dad’s ship, Charr. In the Steven King Dark Tower universe, names including “Char” relate to death.
My dad was an asshole. Very handsome, very drunk, very irresponsible. Sired lots of bastards, including at least one with a girl under eighteen. Died of a massive heart attack on his favorite barstool on his fiftieth birthday, after many years of disappointing the women in his life. He hooked up with my mom, she dumped him after getting to know him a little better. They ran into each other at a party in Waikiki, and both of them had been drinking, and here I am. She tried to make it work and they stayed together for the pregnancy, moving to Pa’ia on Maui for my gestation, but Suzy decided in the third trimester she didn’t want to be the wife of an unfaithful drunk, so she gave me up for adoption.
When I asked my biological mother what she would have named me, she told me “Lonne.” It’s a German boy’s name that belonged to her grandfather, who emigrated here from the real estate that would later be known as Germany. She thought it would be an unusual and distinctive name for a girl. It’s pronounced more like “Lana” at home but she wanted to call me “Lonny” along the same logic as Bette Davis. Since both my mothers were in agreement about at least part of my name, I use “Lani” socially.
My names are both incredibly hard for Americans to pronounce. I don’t really blame them for Charon, the moon and the song are usually pronounced with hard Ch- (cherish, chain) rather than the soft one (Cheryl, champagne) that I use. I am more mystified by how they botch Lani by pronouncing it Lainey or Lanny instead of the “Lawn Knee” that I tend to expect.
When I’m in Hawai’i, though, I can order coffee with zero hesitation, and they’ll pronounce it correctly when it’s ready. Same thing happened in New York, actually, where they’re more cosmopolitan. A lot of Americans stumble.
I don’t consider myself an American. I’m a legal citizen because I was born in the United States of America four years before it became a state, and all four of my adopted and biological parents are citizens too. I was not, however, born on the North American continent, nor was I raised there.
I didn’t find my biological parents until I was in my thirties. There was a big experiment back then where the US was trying to save money on social safety nets by taking kids from the poor and/or unprepared and/or single and swapping them into comfortable middle class families. Then psych students would go interview them as busywork. Go see the movie Three Identical Strangers for a good introduction to the whole Baby Scoop Era thing.
Until then, there was sort of an underlying assumption that my birthmother was some naïve girl who had found herself “in trouble” after an ill-advised affair with a local, back in the days when abortion was illegal. I didn’t get confirmation I was white until I was mid-thirties. Until then, I went around with a sort of skeleton-key approach to race – could be half-anything. The mirror told me that Parent X was likely not full Black or full Asian, but potentially hapa (that’s what we say instead of “mixed” like the people from the American continent say). I’ve got a certain solid, large-bodied build, kind of like a fat Taylor Swift, and people have speculated I look slightly Polynesian.
Although I owe my existence to abortion being illegal, I have No Opinion about it. I respect both anti- and pro- believers as having valid opinions. I’ve worked for both pro- and anti- forces in my legal career, and was peripherally involved in Dobbs, which I saw as a big disappointment. It’s not my focus, and I believe it falls under the umbrella of Universal Healthcare, which I emphatically support. If people want to use it as a political football that distracts from UHC, well, that’s not a strategy I’d personally choose assuming I wanted to win. So I reserve the right to remain detached as far as my abortion opinions. I have zero problems with affirmatively supporting the idea that people of all genders should receive appropriate health care that doesn’t have a bunch of philosophical or religious strings attached to it.
Anyway, I’ll blather more about politics later, but that’s sort of why I abandoned that alternative nineties band and their overly zealous offspring in a red-hot minute, and then they broke up anyway. During the pandemic I got interested in different music, especially this one particular K-Pop idol, and I made a bunch of online friends fangirling over him. We planned to meet if he ever did a world tour, which seemed remote at the time, but he just did his world tour, and I followed it to four different stops: New York, Los Angeles, Oakland and Honolulu.
My last band was all “haw haw, you have to say you hate your birthplace or you can’t hang out with us!”
My new band is more “hey Lani, would you like an excuse to visit Hawai’i because I added a stop there?”
I love my birthplace more than I loved either of my mothers, in fact. My adopted mother was at odds with Hawai’i. Terrified by the bugs. Repelled by the fish (she was a meat eater from Texas who refused to have fish in her kitchen, or to eat in a restaurant that smelled like it). I never ever saw her in a swimsuit.
Plus, there’s a certain kind of “my husband dragged me out here to this godforsaken outpost” type of haole (the Hawaiian word for white) wife that winds up in the islands. They moved out there because their husband wanted to, or his career requested it. And they wanted to be a good wife so they said okay. But when they got there, they got smacked in the face with the multicultural reality of Hawai’i, which looks a lot different from the Hawai’i in the travel ads, where everyone is slim and sexy and white. So they get snubbed by their neighbors for acting high and mighty. Pretty soon the only people who will associate with them are other white bigots who don’t quite fit in, and they sit around telling each other how different and weird things are.
I thought my mom was weird because she was always remarking on things that I was born with as though they were foreign and unusual. My classmates’ names were so exotic! Oh look, I drew local flowers in art class! Wow, look at me eating Japanese snack foods! I developed the impression that I belonged there, but she didn’t. And when I got old enough to socialize, I gravitated toward the snack-sharing Asian nerds as opposed to the bossy haole girls. I was still fighting with my own brattiness but even then I could tell I was far better at sitting quietly with the other nerds, reading books, than interacting with power-tripping non-reading kids who resembled me.
There’s a scene in James Michener’s Hawai’i where one of the missionaries makes his kids wear long wool underwear in the winter, even though they live on Maui, because that’s accepted as a superior and healthy practice back home. Kind of exemplifies the whole “we’re not really from here, we’re BETTER” attitude that haoles, particular the American ones, occasionally get.
Me, I’m a haole from the islands. I know better. I know I’m not the racial majority and the world does not exist for my benefit. I try to live with Hawaiian values like aloha, and being pono, and doing malama. I’m on the other side of this silly line my mom insisted on drawing. By the time I hit my teens, that line had calcified. We’re from different civilizations. Different cultures. Different worldviews. Yours is grounded in ignorance and supremacy, and I reject it. And you think mine is unforgivably brown, and a tad too savage.
I still think about moving back. Then I remember I’m addicted to live music. In Hawai’i, live music is something that usually involves cover bands or local jams, not going out to see some big star. That’s why I was so grateful my K-Pop dude added Honolulu to his list. Also, I have rent control in San Francisco, in a Victorian flat where I’ve been happily living for over thirty years.
There’s water on three sides, plenty of Asian food, and I can see a palm tree from my window. Too cold for swimming here though.
When I go to Hawai’i I end up doing extremely pedestrian things, like eating in food courts. This time I took the bus to the museum, stopping at the mall before and after for plate lunches. I ate meat jun, tan tan udon, katsu curry, char siu fried rice, macadamia nuts, and low-sodium spam.
I spent most of the time in Waikiki. I had a lovely room at the Moana Surfrider with a window seat looking down on the entrance and I would park myself there with a sparkling water, playing Hearthstone on my iPad and watching the crowds, listening to the buskers outside and the dance band downstairs. Early in the mornings I would spend an hour or so floating around in the ocean. Then I’d run away before the sun got too high, wash my hair, and wander around Waikiki in search of lunch. Late afternoon I’d go back in the water, after applying a thorough coating of sunscreen, and that’s how I managed to avoid getting sunburned.
A few times I thought about going exploring, but I decided it would just make me sweaty, and sad, and nostalgic. This trip was partially to commemorate one year after my neck surgery, and it felt good to be stretching my muscles in the ocean. Rather than bouncing around in a car.
I made some cool friends among the other music fans at the show, and on my last night, two of them took me out to a fancy dinner at the Aulani resort. I made this patched and embroidered mini-skort to wear to the show, which features anime character Princess Knight; someone from the meetup just happened to be wearing a shirt featuring her picture. Princess Knight was very popular in Hawai’i – another reference mainland kids from America don’t understand.
I’m really not sure where the world is going to wind up. I have people on my social media feed adamantly insisting it’s going to be thoroughly dystopian. So I decided to travel to all my happy places while I’m at this intersection of being financially capable, physically strong and living in a peaceful country.
I’ll probably elaborate on my politics at length at some point, having already said more than I intended about that subject. One of the things that I was reflecting on during my trip was the idea that while I’m firmly behind liberal science (high speed trains, walkable cities, sustainable energy, anti-racism), I’ve got issues with liberal religion (Freud, Marx, solipsism, nurture, purity testing and so on). As such, I’d rather focus on nuts and bolts practicality like healthcare, and then when everyone’s pain is being treated we can expound on personal philosophies such as the one that goes “I’m the center of the universe and I created all of you in my mind!”
For now, Hawai’i tends to save me from extremist thinking. For example, I had one pop up on social media today, a meme about the new age tendency to split medicine into Western (greedy, corporate, profit-centered) and Eastern (enlightened, wise, holistic) as a sales tactic, realizing their mostly-American consumers aren’t really familiar with Asian-ness and see it as exotic and mysterious. Maybe they’ve even seen movies about the ageless people of Shangri-La. Or maybe they identified with the rich girl in Breakfast Club who packed sushi in her lunchbox – familiarity with the exotic as status symbol.
A lot of people presume I’m rich, given my upbringing in Hawai’i. Nothing could be farther from the truth. My dad worked as a retail manager and my mom was a housewife. We were solidly middle class, with a dark blue Dodge Dart and a black and white television set. We went to the drive-in movie theater, and to McDonald’s. We attended church luaus and Easter parades. On the weekends we’d do beach picnics or the zoo, or sometimes Sea Life Park to see the dolphins and the reef pool. We were frequent visitors at the Bishop Museum, a place I recently dropped by. We didn’t have a boat but occasionally we’d get invites aboard other peoples’ vessels, and sometimes the sunset dinner cruise boats would do off season madness, like raise a Jolly Roger and offer a pirate cruise where all the kids get free eyepatches and fake doubloons, and I loved that sort of thing.
I fought with my parents a lot, but I had fun with my friends. We were one of the first families to move to Mililani, a suburban housing development in the center of the island. The family across the street had seven kids, with two daughters in my approximate age range, and we liked to explore the border between tropical jungle and neatly plowed land awaiting future houses. Sometimes I’d go with their family to Barber’s Point Beach on the weekends, which was for military only and had lots of cool lava caves to explore. I was still a fat prissy whiny brat, but age and socialization were mellowing me out. Eventually I’d discover psychedelics and introspection. Back then I was just a chunky bookworm, working off the baby fat by riding my bike as far as I could go.
Weird things make me nostalgic. I was walking around the Museum neighborhood and saw a school that looked a lot like one I attended, classrooms open to the tropical breeze. I remember kids would bring their favorite records, 33-speed albums and single-song 45s. We would stash them in our cubbies all day, and then after school a couple of the cool teachers would bring out the school record player and let us throw a dance party on the patio. Everyone danced. We didn’t have that social stigma about boys asking girls to dance that mainland American kids have. Everyone danced, either in groups or solo, and we had a great time. I sat there looking at that schoolyard for a while, thinking about dancing to ABC by the Jackson Five and Fire by the Crazy World of Arthur Brown. Probably looked a little creepy, so eventually I moved on.
The only mainland place that gives me positive childhood memories is Disneyland, which we used to visit every year. Until we moved back to the mainland, and spent a few years struggling. Things were more expensive, and there were bill collectors rather than vacations requiring airplanes. Puberty was smacking me around, and I did not fit into the mainland social scene at all.
My relationship with my parents backfired on them. When I was little they had successfully bought my love with plenty of toys and fattening food, and once they ran out, I got belligerent. I left at seventeen, still relatively feral until various boyfriends and roommates schooled me in basic human interaction.
Hawai’i always had time, and space, and patience, for me. Even when I was struggling with the rest of the world. After moving out I spent twenty years before heading back, after my first pregnancy turned tragic. And learning there had been a Hawaiian Renaissance in my absence, and discovering terrific artists, and musicians like Hapa, Israel Kamakawiwo’ole and Keali’i Reichel.
Since then I try to make it back there every few years, just to see what has changed. And float in the water off Waikiki. And eat too much local food, although this last time I behaved myself and stuck to low-sodium spam and unsalted macadamia nuts. And only a few lilikoi-flavored things, most of which I didn’t finish.
I’ve been thinking about lots of heavy things on this trip. My mortality, which might come to an end sooner than I was anticipating, and whether Social Security will continue being available or if I’ll just end up working until I drop. Which I actually wouldn’t mind, I like my career.
The writing part, however …
My first few books concerned teenagers. There were no explicit sex scenes. There were teens doing off-camera sexual things, impliedly, in the Sonny Knight trilogy. There was some ineffective awkward unconsummated bumbling around related to sex in the dinosaur book, which ended with the heroine deciding she wanted one romantic kiss with Mr. Trouble, but nothing further. And there were a few gay characters.
That means they’re way too lewd for red states, and not nearly lewd enough for the speculative fiction writing crowd. Somewhere in the Twilight Zone of lewdness. I note that some hapless author writing pedo-flavored explicit fiction got hauled into jail in another country. I would never go there. Writing erotica doesn’t come naturally to me, I rarely read it, and I have to have other people go over it to make sure I’m not being cliched. I’m coming from the other side of the problem, as an asexual worried my material isn’t lewd enough.
I tried writing adult horror, with lewdness, but my heart wasn’t really in it. It was more of a way of dealing with pandemic anxieties. The pandemic really ruined a lot of horror themes, since suddenly life was scarier than escapism. My horror wasn’t successful, and I’ve taken one of the books out of print. The other one, which deals with immigration themes is basically a retelling of Malinche and Cortes as a fotonovela-style drama set in America involving space aliens. I think I put lots of brain cells into that one but it’s a total flop.
Which leaves me in a weird limbo. I don’t want to write for kids at all, let alone explicit material involving them (and secretly I’m rejoicing that I don’t have to try to write that sort of John Green, Sarah Maas, non-explicit erotica sort of thing anymore now that it’s emphatically out of fashion). I really don’t want to write anything erotic, period, since it would be market-directed fanservice rather than anything I really wanted to do.
So I’m not sure whether I’ll continue writing anything at this point. Possibly it’s time to pursue another art form, or just devote my twilight years to coloring books and acquiring World of Warcraft achievements.
There are two books that I think are still in me, however. The first is a spin off from the dinosaur book featuring one of the boy band dudes. I want to make fun of the music industry basically, except on a faraway planet where all the names have been changed.
The other one has to do with wanting to give back to Hawai’i. Writing a beach book that amuses and entertains tourists. Or maybe collaborating with an author on a storybook, or a non-fictional coffee table book. It doesn’t even have to be a book, but since I’m a writer, it sprang to mind. I feel that if I do that, I’ll feel okay about returning there for my final years. Which is something I’d really like to do.