Aloha Greetings from Kauai!
Here we are into nearly our second full week on the island, with another week to go, and I'm still not totally acclimated to the "new normal".
Last year, during the Covid Times, we didn't come of course. We cancelled our trip and stayed locked in our house all spring, not having any idea that a whole year would pass before things started to feel even a little bit normal again. Actually I'm convinced more and more that "normal" will be redefined for some time to come. At any rate, Hawaii started letting visitors come back to the state but when we booked our stay in January it was with a wish rather than a guarantee. We expected to have to cancel again. Then came the vaccines (Hallelujia!) and Hawaii put a program in place to begin to welcome visitors if they passed a battery of physical and cognitive tests of will and patience to get the Golden Ticket in.
We had to register with Safe Hawaii online. Then we had to schedule a particular type of Covid test (even if vaccinated) from a Hawaii-approved partner laboratory to ensure we got the results within 72 hours of flying. (We passed dozens of not approved test sites before we got to an approved one 20 miles from our home). We had to register with the lab, then await them posting our test result (negative). We had to pay them $175 per test, so before we got the test, we called our insurance to ensure we'd be reimbursed. They said yes. Then we had to fill out insurance forms and submit our request with a copy of the receipt. We had to upload the negative result of the test to Safe Hawaii before leaving the ground in Seattle. If the upload didn't work (ours didn't for some unknown reason; I followed the instructions to the letter!) we had to have a PDF print out of the result in hand to show at the airport. Once we passed that hurdle we had to download a QR code on our phones at the Safe Hawaii website proving our negative Covid test status to show once we landed in Kauai and also at the car rental place, the resort, and any other place that might require seeing our test result to let us in. Then we went to the beach. LOL
Speaking of car rentals...we had ours reserved since January and a good thing. We have heard there are zero cars available to rent! Last year, rental companies purged their inventory all across the US and people have taken to renting U-Hauls in some places to have something to drive! See? Not normal.
Once here masks are required throughout Hawaii when indoors. So we still mask up inside public spaces. Once outside we take them off. On, off, on, off. Part of this, our home-away-from-home resort for 20+ years, has been sold to another company (no longer Marriott, now Royal Sonesta) but we still are Marriott time share owners, so our accommodations have not changed, but the "vibe" is different and I feel we've been shunted off to the side, but maybe that's just me resenting that we are no longer the valued guests we once were. Hello, Ego. LOL
Also, the retail shops on the lower levels along the gardens are all gone. My fave dress shop, Tropical Tantrum, is now the new Welcome Desk office for timeshare guests (having been evicted from the beautiful lobby now occupied by Royal Sonesta). The jewelry store I never went in is an empty room behind dirty windows; the art gallery, car rental office, photography gallery -- all closed and empty. There are no local craftspeople set up on the Terrace each morning. No breakfast buffet on the Terrace either. The two (over-priced) on-site restaurants are open only limited hours. We don't mind so much because we grill every night but now there are only two grills for the entire resort (the third closed for social distancing) so the wait can be long. We've learned to grill our fresh fish at 5:00 (a bit early for us) or 7:30 (in the dark), avoiding the prime dinner hour rush of long lines and people cooking huge hunks of red meat. Ugh!
On the plus side -- no cruise ships are docking so our beach is not inundated with "boat people" or rowdy crew members several days a week. It's a bit quieter -- no late night music from the bar down the beach or after-dark beach revelers. The sun shines, the breezes blow, the waves crash, the night sky is awash with stars, the ocean water is warm, the pool is beautiful, our "spot" on the beach has been waiting for us every day. Hub has gotten better at riding the waves on his stand-up paddle board; I've read 4 books; hiking trails are not too crowded; our morning 4-5 mile walks are lovely and I've lost a bit more weight -- now at my lowest in decades. (I'll write about this weight loss journey another time). We are relaxed and content...it's truly a time of respite from responsibilities and obligations that come with the territory at home. And a welcome celebration of traveling to another of our special places post-vaccine.
I notice that my gratitude for my life has grown deeper and more poignant since the Covid Times. I am getting amazing clarity on what is truly important to me and my mindfulness of present moment is sharpened. I have changed in some profound ways over the past couple of years of personal and societal challenge. There is no room for taking anything for granted. It's all a gift and appreciating every moment for the lessons we can learn, for the joy we can feel, for the love we can give and receive, for the effort we can make to create and preserve what is important to us is really all there is.
I know, I know. Easy for me to say from my perch on the lanai looking out at the beach and bay that is my view for three weeks. Yet, we all have a view of some kind, something or someone we love, something we long for, something of beauty we appreciate now, something that provides meaning to our lives.
May we all find a "new normal" that sharpens the senses, deepens gratitude, and helps us grow in equanimity and peace.
At least, that's the view from here...©


All the changes at your time share are disappointing, I sure, but nothing is normal now so many in the future some of those shops will come back? Still, it's nice to get away from our everyday activities. Send some of that glorious sun shine to the Mainland!
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