Today's excursion takes place in the evening. I booked a ticket to Luau Kalamaku, having no idea what to expect from this excursion. And I hoped that this excursion would be well worth the time and money spent on it.
But first....
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I called RQS and chatted for a while and then freshened up to go to the luau By now, I have gotten used to presenting my male ID to security while presenting as female. Considering where many transgender folk are in their journeys, I consider myself to be very lucky. Confidence in one's presentation is very important to being accepted in one's gender. For example, there always seems to be a line for the women's room. A nervous transgender will give off signals such as: "Will they see me as something other than female?" "Will someone figure out what I am and cause me trouble?" And I've silently asked these questions in the past when I was new to presenting as female. Now, I stand in line with the rest of the women and chit chat when a woman wants to talk with me. We're there to go and do our business, and being confident in how I do that goes a long way to being accepted as female and being treated as one.
Around 4 pm, I walked into the ship's theater which was being used to stage 3 groups of people going to the luau. There was one person telling us about Hawaii, the Luau, and the Debarkation process to keep us occupied until our buses were ready to take us where we were going. Since the ship was only 10 minutes away, we were all at the luau by 5 pm.
The luau consisted of 3 parts: General Entertainment, Dinner, and the presentation on Hawaiian cultural history presented in dance. The first part had performers singing various songs (including holiday tunes) to entertain us, and to get us used to the cultural history presentation to come. I wasn't that impressed by this part of the luau, simply because I couldn't get into the performances - my mind was elsewhere, probably focusing on the dinner yet to come.
Dinner was served buffet style. There were two meats available to eat - Pork and Chicken. Both were very tasty. But one does not go to the luau to rave about the food. It is more like going to a dinner theater where the food is decent, but the performance is better than expected. And that was true of the cultural history performance to come.
I was queued for the ladies' room when the show began. Hawaiians, Tahitians, and others are cut from the same "Bad Ass" stock. It took a lot of guts to explore the pacific in double hulled canoes and settle in remote islands - all without modern technology. And this part of the show illustrated what these people went through to find, then settle Hawaii. Although the show started off slow, it had an exciting climax with men dancing with fire in motion.
All too soon, the show ended and it was time to return to the ship. As usual, I had to get wanded by security, even though I had eliminated all the metal from my body. My first stop was at the photography area, where I bought several pictures for display. (I had to burn off the bulk of my $100 cruise credit, or lose it.) Then it was back to my room to relax for the evening.
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