100% Responsibility and the Promise of a Hot Fudge Sundae
 An Interview with Ihaleakala Hew Len
By Cat Saunders:
How
 do you thank someone who has helped to set you free? How do you thank a
 man whose gentle spirit and zinger statements have forever altered the 
course of your life? Ihaleakala Hew Len is such a man for me.
Like
 a soul brother who shows up unexpectedly in an hour of need, Ihaleakala
 came into my life in March of 1985, during a time of massive change for
 me. I met him during a training called "Self I-Dentity Through 
Ho'oponopono," which he facilitated along with the late Morrnah Nalamaku
 Simeona, a native Hawaiian 
kahuna ("keeper of the secret").
For
 me, Ihaleakala and Morrnah are part of the rhythm of life. Though I 
love them both dearly, I don't really dwell on thoughts of them as 
people, yet their influence is always there for me, beating a steady 
pulse like African drums in the night.
In 1997, I had the honor of
 being asked to interview Ihaleakala by The Foundation of I, Inc. 
(Freedom of the Cosmos), an organization founded by Morrnah. It was an 
even greater honor to learn that he would be coming from his home in 
Hawaii to meet with me personally.
Dr. Ihaleakala S. Hew Len is 
the foundation's president and administrator. Together with Morrnah, 
Ihaleakala has worked with thousands of people over the years, including
 groups at the United Nations, UNESCO (United Nations Educational, 
Scientific and Cultural Organization), International Human Unity 
Conference on World Peace, World Peace Conference, Traditional Indian 
Medicine Conference, Healers for Peace in Europe, and the Hawaii State 
Teachers Association.
Ihaleakala also has extensive experience 
working with developmentally disabled people and with the criminally 
mentally ill and their families. In all his work as an educator, the 
Ho'oponopono process supports and permeates every breath of his efforts.
Simply
 put, Ho'oponopono means, "to make right," or "to rectify an error." 
According to the ancient Hawaiians, error arises from thoughts that are 
tainted by painful memories from the past. Ho'oponopono offers a way to 
release the energy of these painful thoughts, or errors, which cause 
imbalance and disease.
Along with the updated Ho'oponopono 
process, Morrnah was guided to include the three parts of the self, 
which are the key to Self I-Dentity. These three parts—which exist in 
every molecule of reality—are called the Unihipili (child/subconscious),
 the Uhane (mother/conscious), and the Aumakua (father/superconscious).
When
 this "inner family" is in alignment, a person is in rhythm with the 
Divinity. With this balance, life begins to flow. Thus, Ho'oponopono 
helps restore balance in the individual first, and then in all of 
creation.
By introducing me to this three-part system, along with 
the most powerful forgiveness process I know (Ho'oponopono), Ihaleakala 
and Morrnah taught me this: the best way to bring healing to every part 
of my life—and to the entire universe—is to take 100% responsibility and
 work on 
myself. In addition, they taught the simple wisdom of 
total self-care. As Ihaleakala said in a thank-you note after our 
interview: "You take good care of yourself. If you do, all will be 
beneficiaries."
Once, Ihaleakala left for an entire afternoon in 
the middle of a training I was taking, because his Unihipili 
(child/subconscious) told him to go to his hotel and take a long nap. Of
 course, he was responsible about leaving, and Morrnah was there to 
teach. Even still, his exit made a lasting impression on me.
For 
someone like me, raised in a family and culture that admonished me to 
put others first, Ihaleakala's actions astounded and delighted me. He 
got his nap, and I got an unforgettable lesson in self-care.
Cat:
 Ihaleakala, when I met you in 1985, I'd just started private practice 
after working as a counselor in agencies for four years. I remember you 
said, "All therapy is a form of manipulation." I thought, "Jeez! What am
 I supposed to do now?" I knew you were right, so I almost quit! 
Obviously, I didn't, but that statement completely changed the way I 
work with people.
Ihaleakala: Manipulation happens 
when I (as a therapist) come from the idea that you are ill and I am 
going to work on you. On the other hand, it's 
not manipulation if I realize that you are coming to me to give me a chance to look at what's going on in 
me. There's a big difference.
If
 therapy is about your belief that you're there to save the other 
person, heal the other person, or direct the other person, then the 
information you bring will come out of the intellect, the conscious 
mind. But the intellect has no real understanding of problems and how to
 approach them. The intellect is so picayunish is its way of solving 
problems!
It doesn't realize that when a problem is solved by 
transmutation—by using Ho'oponopono or related processes—then the 
problem and 
everything related to it is solved, even at microscopic levels and back to the beginning of time.
So
 first of all, I think the most important question to ask is, "What is a
 problem?" If you ask people this, there's no clarity. Because there's 
no clarity, they make up some way of solving the problem
…
Cat: … as if the problem is "out there."
Ihaleakala:
 Yes. For example, the other day I got a call from the daughter of a 
woman who is 92. She said, "My mother's had these severe hip pains for 
several weeks."
While she's talking to me, I'm asking this 
question of the Divinity, "What is going on in me that I have caused 
that woman's pain?" And then I ask, "How is it that I can rectify that 
problem within me?" The answers to these questions come, and I do 
whatever I'm told.
Maybe a week later the woman calls me and says,
 "My mother's feeling better now!" This doesn't mean the problem won't 
recur, because there are often multiple causes for what appears to be 
the same problem.
Cat: I have a lot of recurring 
illness and chronic pain. I work with it all the time, using 
Ho'oponopono and other clearing processes to make amends for all the 
pain I've caused since the beginning of time. 
Ihaleakala: Yes. The idea being that people like us are in the healing professions because we have caused a lot of pain.
Cat: Big time! 
Ihaleakala: How wonderful to know that, and to have people pay us for having caused them their problems!
I
 said this to a woman in New York, and she said, "God, if only they 
knew!" But you see, nobody knows. Psychologists, psychiatrists, they 
keep thinking that they're there to help heal the other person.
So if someone like you comes to me, I say to the Divinity, "Please, whatever is going on 
in me
 that I have caused this pain in Cat, tell me how I can rectify it." And
 I will apply whatever information I'm given indefinitely, until your 
pain is
 gone or until you ask me to stop. It's not so much the 
effect that is important as the getting to the problem. That's the key.
Cat: You don't focus on the outcome, because we're not in charge of that.
Ihaleakala: Right. We can only petition.
  Cat: We also don't know when a particular pain or illness will shift. 
Ihaleakala:
 Yes. Say a woman has been taking an herb that was suggested for her, 
and it's not working. Again, the question is "What's going on 
in me that this woman is experiencing this herb not working for her?" I would work on that. I would keep 
cleaning, keep my mouth closed, and allow the process of transmutation to take place.
As
 soon as you engage the intellect, the process stops. The thing to 
remember when some kind of healing doesn't seem to be working is this: 
there may be multiple errors—multiple problems or painful memories that 
are causing the pain. We know nothing! Only the Divinity knows what's 
really going on.
I gave a presentation out in Dallas last month, 
and I spoke with this woman, a Reiki master. I said, "Let me ask you a 
question. When somebody comes to you with a problem, where is that 
problem?" She looked puzzled when I said, "You're the one who caused the
 problem, so your client is going to pay you to heal 
your problem!" Nobody gets that.
Cat: 100% responsibility.
Ihaleakala:
 100% knowing that you're the cause of the problem. 100% knowing that 
you have the responsibility, then, to rectify the error. Can you imagine
 if we all knew we are 100% responsible?
I made a deal with myself
 ten years ago that I would treat myself to a hot fudge sundae—so huge 
it would make me sick—if I could get through the day without having some
 judgment of someone. I've never been able to do it! I notice I catch 
myself more often, but I never get through a day.
So how do I get 
that across to people — that we are each 100% responsible for problems? 
If you want to solve a problem, no matter what kind of problem, work on 
yourself.
If the problem is with another person, for example, just ask yourself, "What's going on 
in me
 that's causing this person to bug me?" People only show up in your life
 to bug you! If you know that, you can elevate any situation, and you 
can release there. It's simple: "I'm sorry for whatever's going on. 
Please forgive me."
Cat: You don't have to actually say that out loud to them, and you don't even have to understand the problem. 
Ihaleakala:
 That's the beauty of this. You don't have to understand. It's like the 
Internet. You don't understand all this! You just go to the Divinity and
 you say, "Can we download?" and the Divinity downloads, and then you 
get the necessary information. But because we don't know who we are, we 
never download direct from the Light. We go outside.
I remember Morrnah used to say, "It's an inside job." If you want to be successful, it's an inside job. Work on yourself!
Cat:
 I know that 100% responsibility is the only thing that works, but I 
used to struggle with this stuff, because I'm an overly responsible 
caretaker type. When I heard you talking about 100% responsibility not 
just for myself, but for every situation and problem, I thought, "Whoa! 
This is crazy! I don't need anybody telling me to be even more responsible!"  
    Yet the more I thought about it, the more I realized that there's a big difference between overly responsible caretaking, versus totally responsible self-care. One is about being a good little girl, and the other is about getting free. 
    I
 remember you talking about the years when you were a staff psychologist
 at Hawaii State Hospital for the Criminally Insane. You said that when 
you started working there, the ward for criminals was full of violence, 
and when you left four years later, there was none. 
Ihaleakala: Basically, I took 100% responsibility. I just worked on myself.
Cat: You said that when you worked with the inmates, they wouldn't even be there with you. 
Ihaleakala:
 Right. I would only go into the building to check the results. If they 
still looked depressed, then I'd work on myself some more.
Cat: Would you tell a story about using Ho'oponopono for so-called inanimate objects? 
Ihaleakala:
 I was in an auditorium once getting ready to do a lecture, and I was 
talking to the chairs. I asked, "Is there anybody I've missed? Does 
anyone have a problem that I need to take care of?"
One of the 
chairs said, "You know, there was a guy sitting on me today during a 
previous seminar who had financial problems, and now I just feel dead!" 
So I 
cleaned with that problem, and I could just see the chair straightening up. Then I heard, "Okay! I'm
 ready to handle the next guy!"
What
 I actually try to do is teach the room. I say to the room and 
everything in it, "Do you want to learn how to do Ho'oponopono? After 
all, I'm going to leave soon. Wouldn't it be nice if you could do this 
work for yourselves? Some say yes, some say no, and some say, "I'm too 
tired!"
Then I ask the Divinity, "If they say they would like to 
learn, how can I help them learn?" Most of the time, I get this: "Leave 
the blue book 
(Self I-Dentity Through Ho'oponopono)
 with them." So I just take the blue book out and leave it on one of the
 chairs or on a table while I'm talking. We don't give tables enough 
credit for being quiet and aware of what is going on!
Ho'oponopono
 is really very simple. For the ancient Hawaiians, all problems begin as
 thought. But having a thought is not the problem. So what's the 
problem? The problem is that all our thoughts are imbued with painful 
memories, memories of persons, places, or things.
The intellect 
working alone can't solve these problems, because the intellect only 
manages. Managing things is no way to solve problems. You want to let 
them go! When you do Ho'oponopono, what happens is that the Divinity 
takes the painful thought and neutralizes or purifies it.
You 
don't purify the person, place, or thing. You neutralize the energy you 
associate with that person, place, or thing. So the first stage of 
Ho'oponopono is the purification of that energy.
Now something wonderful happens. Not only does that energy get neutralized; it also gets 
released, so
 there's a brand new slate. Buddhists call it the Void. The final step 
is that you allow the Divinity to come in and fill the void with light.
To
 do Ho'oponopono, you don't have to know what the problem or error is. 
All you have to do is notice any problem you are experiencing 
physically, mentally, emotionally, whatever. Once you notice, your 
responsibility is to immediately begin to 
clean, to say, "I'm sorry. Please forgive me."
 Cat: So the true job of the intellect is not to solve problems, but to ask for forgiveness. 
Ihaleakala:
 Yes. My job here on earth is twofold. My job is first of all to make 
amends. My second job is to awaken people who might be asleep. Almost 
everyone is asleep! 
The only way I can awaken them is to work on myself.
Our
 interview is an example. For weeks before our appointment today, I've 
been doing the clearing work, so when you and I meet, it's like two 
pools of water coming together. They move through and they go. That's 
all.
Cat: In all the years I've been doing interviews, 
this is the only one I didn't prepare for. Every time I checked in, my 
Unihipili said that I should just come and be with you. My intellect 
went nuts trying to convince me that I should prepare, but I didn't.
Ihaleakala:
 Good for you! The Unihipili can be really fun. One day I was coming 
down the highway in Hawaii. When I started to head toward the usual 
off-ramp, I heard my
 Unihipili say in a singing voice, "I wouldn't go down there if I were you." I thought, "But I always go there."
Then
 when we got closer, about fifty yards away, I heard, "Hello! I wouldn't
 go down there if I were you!" Second chance. "But we always go down 
there!"
Now I'm talking out loud and people in cars around me are looking at me like I'm crazy. About 25 yards away, I hear a loud, 
"I wouldn't go down there if I were you!" I went down there, and I sat for two and a half hours.
There
 was a huge accident. Couldn't move back, couldn't move forward. 
Finally, I heard my Unihipili say, "Told you!" Then it wouldn't talk to 
me for weeks! I mean, why talk to me if I wasn't going to listen?
I
 remember one time when I was going to be on television to talk about 
Ho'oponopono. My children heard about it and they said, "Dad, we heard 
you are going to be on TV. Make sure your socks match!"
They didn't care what I said. They just cared that my socks matched. See how children know the important things in life?
This interview was originally published by The New Times
 in September 1997. 
For more information about Ho'oponopono, please visit http://www.self-i-dentity-through-hooponopono.com/ or http://www.hooponopono.org.
For additional information about Ihaleakala Hew Len, Ph.D., please visit www.zero-wise.com.
If
 you're wondering about the baseball cap, Ihaleakala wears it so he 
remembers not to be so intellectual. The background blue represents the 
Void, or Emptiness, and the red "P" represents Mother Earth, or the 
creative force, Pele.
Article reproduced with the kind pernission of healer, end of life counselor, and spiritual teacher Dr Cat Saunders- 
Dr Cat.org