The year is 325 AD. On one of a small cluster of islands in the south pacific sea, now known as the Marquesas, a young Tahitian man is anxiously gathering tools for a unique voyage.

Like his father, Reva is an astronomer, but he has learned to read the stars and navigate his way around his home islands like no other. Now, he is part of an elite group who will courageously set sail and explore the vast Pacific Ocean—in a small, double-hulled canoe. A few have gone before him. None have returned.

For the Polynesians, it is an age of exploration, and Reva’s adept celestial mapping skills put him at the forefront of this movement. It would be his destiny to make the trek and find his way to an undiscovered new chain of islands, what is now called Hawaii. He would also be the first to return home and share his “map” of the stars, which would guide travelers across the sea and, for the next 300 years, help establish a new thriving community in the central pacific region.

Reva’s story is an amalgamation of stories of the Polynesian people’s journey across the sea from 300-600 AD. This epic migration is a dramatic demonstration of a quality in the human heart that drives us to continually expand and explore our boundaries. Expansion requires courage, and courageous people, notably, are not fearless. Courageous people, like these Polynesians, feel their fears and move through them anyway. And much is gained.

In Hawaiian culture, the word for courage is koa, getting its source inspiration from the koa tree. Koa wood is one of the strongest and most durable woods in all of Hawaii and, many agree, the most lustrous and beautiful. The word koa reflects the Hawaiian’s ability to reflect on nature to find meaning and wisdom.

As the Polynesians knew, an epic journey of growth comes with great challenge and risk. In our own journey of self-discovery, courage is almost always required. There are times when we must cast off from the safe shore, set sail into the unknown, and risk. We must hold tight to our vision of a better world while staying open to how that will eventually look.

For our journey we must be durable and strong, like the koa wood, if the passage is to hold any beauty. Once committed, we begin to work with and understand the currents in our lives. As we commit to staying present, we learn to trust our navigational skills, however rudimentary.

In time, we learn to map the firmament of our higher energies and detect patterns, just as Reva learned to detect and follow the guidance of the stars. To the naked eye, there is no pattern. But to us, like Reva, we learn to see and follow it. The result is the discovery of new internal worlds, and with it, freedom, expansion, and growth.

Man is the most insane species. He worships an invisible God and destroys a visible Nature. Unaware that this Nature that he has been destroying is this God he’s worshiping.

—Hubert Reeves


Published with permission from Practical Yoga’s Wisdom for Everyday People by William M. Donnelly.

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