Zero Limits ( PDFDrive )

(The Reality Seeker) #1
Akua.” Very few people questioned it. I loved it, though, because it
felt like I was asking Divinity to clean my blog by using a phrase that
meant, to me, the parting of the clouds to see God.

While the weekend training installed “I love you” in my head, at least
temporarily, I wanted more. I wrote and asked Dr. Hew Len if he
would come to Texas and talk about ho’oponopono to a small group
of friends. This was my plan to have more of him to myself. He
would fly to Texas for a small talk, and stay with me. While he was
with me, I’d pick his brains about what he knows, including how he
healed that entire ward of mentally ill criminals. Dr. Hew Len agreed
and wrote the following to me:

Joe:
Thank you for taking the time to call me. You didn’t have to and you
did. I am grateful.
I would like to propose to you an interview “format” for the informal
visit in Austin in February. Perhaps the backdrop for the interview
could be a kind of survey of problem solving approaches that you
covered in your book, Adventures Within: Confessions of an Inner
World Journalist. I see you being more than the interviewer and me
more than the interviewee in this arrangement.
Clarity is so important in conveying information, be it in whatever
art form it takes. For example, there is much fuzziness as to what a
problem is, much less its cause. How does one solve a problem
when one might be unclear about it? Where is the problem to be
found to be processed? In the Mind? What’s that? Or in the Body
(where most people put their bets)? Or both? Perhaps it’s not in any
of these venues.
There’s even the question of who or what does the problem solving.
As you mentioned in your book, it is difficult to keep judgment at
bay even as one attempts to problem solve using such methods as

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