Naomi Cooper

Mom, Writer, Model in Hawaii

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Taste of Semper Fi

July 06, 2022 by Naomi Cooper in Hawaii Life, Before Kids

The Marine Corp recruitment office in Kaneohe was in the open-air strip mall (the one with Foodland and First Hawaiian Bank), right off the freeway going North. It had enough room for a standard cookie-cutter wooden-desk, a few chairs, a back nook and one-to-two recruiters to look inviting through that large display window. Kaneohe was usually overcast, humid and sunny all at the same time – the rain you got used to – that’s just how Hawaii is, especially the “windward” or the East sides of all the islands. My cousin made me go on her Marine Corp summer assignments for a few weeks before she got relocated – I was bribed by Genki sushi, Starbucks and escape from my new “home”, a grey-slate-tiled two story in Enchanted Lakes of Kailua, Oahu – that seemed a thousand degrees hotter (and louder with neighbors so close) than my breezy Maui home surrounded by cow pastures and eucalyptus trees. A few prospects a day would come in, mostly age 17-25 with some excitement at the attention we gave. Whatever professional interest one had, there was a path in military (so we told) and the free training/school, free room/board and travel is what usually brought them in. My script was minimal - I was there for show.

She was five years older than me, had done all the dangerous piercings no one dared – the tongue, the eyebrow, the entire ear lobes and I wanna say the lips at one point before her sign over… the nipples with the bars threw them were the most intense, for sure. She drove a beat-up, brown Ford pick-up stick-shift with Kiss and Metallica blasting the whole way to church. Her boots were the tie up kind. She had that half-shaven-head style with the bangs flipped to one side in the front. She was wild in ways no one believed were related to me. I thought her to be both fierce and childlike at the same time. It’s been an interesting relationship over the years but one I’ll get to later – she and I have some unspoken loyalty and were and are still extremely different to this day. I’ll call her Kris for now – Kris – a Scorpio, gifted in theater, drawing women portraits to the tee, poetry, psycho-analysis, containing secrets, puzzles, hunting, dog-whispering, soap making, good with her hands, jewelry, metal work, building, mechanics and now – a very dedicated, loving mother and wife. In my youth, she was both intimidating and unafraid. I saw her as hard. Different. Deep. Conflicting. Rebellious and attractive in an intensity that stirred all static. She broke molds. I was both fascinated and felt dominated by this female who’d one day dream prophecies of my life (that came true), take me skinny dipping everywhere, and be a support in times of need despite her irritation with my opposite ways. White, native American girl that would one day support Hawaiian activism and native rights – she’s a story on her own.

“You are on the jerk-off wall of the barracks next door to me, Sarah” Kris half-laughed through the phone. “My little-teen-cousin is in the bikini calendar taped to the mirror in the guys’ bathroom – what the fuck!” Her calls throughout the years were sporadic but always memorable. She’d end up sneaking me into her barracks a few years later to spend a few nights in her bunk. Her technical work on helicopter’s was far beyond me but those feelings of constraints, structure, adherents, the time pressure and black and white that take priority over feminine instincts, I cannot forget.

Bellows is one of the best (gorgeous white sand, crisp tourquiuse water) public beaches of Hawaii yet is treated as private for those coasties, airmen, and devil-dogs - meaning public access is not just given to just surf that famous break or walk that coast -you need a military ID to get on the best parts (a Native Hawaiian debate to go on for ages - another blog, another time). Summer of O4 made it clear I was not to consider the military though. While Noa was hoping I’d ask my other cousin, Kris’s younger brother, about him – I was at the Bellow’s beach in Waimanalo running laps with the new, young, eager recruits, doing my cuz a favor and looking cute to keep some incentive – took one for the team. My calves would be burning after just one stretch of beach runs - fine, heaps of sand makes your feet sink in a good 7-8 inches each step making a stair master seem easy. Those fucking jumping jacks and “Drop and give me 20” push-ups though. I just can’t do it the same as the guys. Am I a second late? Shit. Did everyone have to do it again because of me? Ooops! ...Sorry?

Me, 5’5 and 110 pound ballerina-raised body was not cutting it. Mostly though - it was my lack of enthusiasm for that life. Attempt to hold that rifle, aim, and hit the target at the practice hill? Hell no! At least I didn’t have to deal with the ego yet – that comes later – when the guys get the uniform and the rankings begin. Then the male domination mind begins, the liquor and notches on the belt. I swore I’d never ever date or be with a Marine after all I saw my cousin handle (bless her) not to mention the fact I come from military officers … and then shit, I ended up marrying one (and still trying to divorce) – like that default button. This kind of mindset stays with you. It’s indeed what they say - “Once a Marine, Always a Marine” and that trickles into everything, the marriage, the language, the work life and roles that come with that pre-positioned hierarchy - it’s hard to ever leave it once conditioned. And here i’m admitting its in my blood - distant but in the cell memory. I’ve struggled to find balance in it - in the domination/control structure that destroys so many families inner peace.

…all those privates and sargents i’d end up with way too many free drinks from… And the Kailua beaches filled with high-and-tight hair cuts, pumped up and clean shaven beer drinkers smoking killer BBQ were the normal weekends in Kailua, Oahu. Steady paychecks, a pension, USAA insurance, free living on base, that super cheap-on-base shopping, a man who can use a gun, save a drowning swimmer, bench press to kill, who still open doors for a lady, clean house, are organized, can keep public talk simple and those sexy manners are some of those perks many women go running after the uniformed for. So, don’t get me wrong – I have a lot of respect for the service (and they are fun). They work like fucking bulls – hours on end – determined minds that can bite the bullet with sweat and tears secondary to the goal of success, muscle like no other, beatings beyond the ring. I’ve heard men’s voice shake as the describe the explosion that threw them out of their belt into a metal ceiling, bloody faced, ribs broken, hearing gone for days, dead friend’s bodies to carry… Bravery, Resilience, Discipline is something our society lacks and this is a necessary old school teaching that military still holds. If we don’t have strong walls of protection, there will be a conqueror that comes and takes over (history says it over and over). I know we all want to believe everyone is kind in nature and that with regulation, people will be fair… but I hope my sharing gives some light on how human nature is always going to be ruled by emotion – which is not always talked about and not always predictable… and to embrace the unpredictable or that pain we hide is maybe the only way we can get through the insanity of being human. That to ignore the dark will not save us – that only in facing the dark, can the light and lovely be saved and human feelings can continue without complete death to the ironic experience of living.

*Please note that this read is meant to be entertaining, not necessarily factual

July 06, 2022 /Naomi Cooper
military families, marine corp, Hawaii families, Growing Up in Hawaii
Hawaii Life, Before Kids

Hella Fine

June 25, 2022 by Naomi Cooper in Hawaii Life, Before Kids, Soul Search, Childhood

She was hot. Everyone said it when she started 7th grade with us – the new girl. Was rare someone slipped into a non-entry year at the only prep school on the island, but hey, she was smart and creative and very confident. Aquarius of course, my kind of girl – apparently all my besties in life usually fall into a few consistent signs with Aquarius by far end up my ride or dies, at least for a solid portion of time before life pulls us apart. Must be the fun, rebellion they have – but also that unemotional response that seems to handle every grave situation in life with ease.

Already with mature hips hitting a size 5 in womens, sexy curves and size b/c boobs, a pretty smile and thick brown hair – she spoke Spanish way better than any of us did because of course, no one in Hawaii had really grown up around it. We all were just trying to pass requirements to graduate with one of 3 options for foreign language (Japanese, French or Spanish back in early 2000s) while she was born in Mexico, grown in California and therefore, way ahead of the game for Spanish honors. She was the only child , daughter of a golf-course developer, well read and sassy as hell.

I had never seen red-dotted Henna-lines on a body-up-close before her. I had never heard anyone call California “Cali” or say “hella” as she would soon rub off on me. She pulled me into choir, geek-debates in homeroom and home-made camcorder music videos impersonating virgin-pop-princess, Brittney Spears and R&B queen-of-the-dammed, Aaliyah. She was the driver of the relationship for sure and one of the most influential people of my life and as much as I want to give her full credit in naming her, I’ll have to call her Eva – just in case she gets famous and I get in trouble one day. (I mean, she’s got a huge following right now with these amazing feminist podcasts and a subscription workshop on female embodiment – so hey, she’s getting there).

“I can’t let you go out like this,” Eva glared at my oversized church branded T-shirt and Costco jean shorts. Not like there was anywhere to go out to at age 12 in Maui. But she had this fantasy that sneaking into Hapa Night Club (the only “nightclub” besides the upscale hotel lounges available) would fill her craving for the Cali excitement she missed.

“I couldn’t tell my mom where we were going though, and my dad would never let me wear anything like you – you know that.” I was totally risking a full month grounded. But Eva was so fun. Last weekend was the crystal ceremony in the backyard jungle, the weekend before was phone calls with the boys about boobs, the other weekend we snuck into the movies even with my little diapered brother in toe (I was always on babysitting duty but she didn’t let it bother her)… She fed me her mom’s home-made weed-brownies, all the PG13/R rated movies I wasn’t allowed to watch at home - she’d get for me at blockbuster. Not to mention she devirginized me by explaining in detail what a blow-job was and that fuck was a verb not a noun, the 1st time we hung out.  

“It’s ok, babe, I gotchu” she started pulling out crop-tops and leather skirts from her drawer. “We just gotta get rid of that bush too – all of them, the one on your face, your legs, that bikini - everything.”                wait ….            What?

Hair Removal. No one had ever taught me to pluck my eyebrows, shave my legs, and definitely not anything about a bikini line. My conservative 3rd generation (in hawaii from Japan, some would say I’m “yonsei”) Japanese family only filled in the full sized eyebrows - not ever “shape” them fashionably and they only shaved the calves- not ever up the thighs and no one dared change the 70’s full grown standard…except me. I was the oldest grandchild in that era - and the black sheep of many conservative things I’d come to find out those next few years.

She had me sitting naked on the toilet so she could reach both the tweezers and the shave crème, and rinse off the razor in the sink. Yep, she was grooming me – one leg up at a time, that pink foam, TLC playing in the background. I had a couple bleeding nicks but she was careful overall. I think the eyebrow plucking hurt more. The fresh white skin under the brows needed concealer to match the rest of my tanned face.

The tender gap inbetween the thigh and the cooch though – that is a hard spot to get on your own – peering over trying to see it is fucking hard. “Just give me the razor, Sarah.” Sarah – my name before Oahu and modeling for Japanese (who called me Naomi San) took over – she was so unbothered about sex, nakedness, swearing, like a true international. I’ll never forget the feel of her fingers pressing my then smaller, lips - away from the razor so she didn’t nick me down there, just holding my breathe, trying so hard not to flinch.

“Why do we have to shave me there anyway? We aren’t going to the beach or anything, right?” My extremely sheltered upbringing screaming innocence. The red lipstick puckered in that sass as she chimed, “Just in case we get a boy tonight.” She was truly trying to give me the upper hand although I would have no idea what she was talking about for another year and a half or so,” I want you to feel amazing and beautiful, like we should. And you don’t want it all itchy like that anyway, shhiiieet.”

Knock.

Her mom was ready to drive us - she’d be the one to give the ok to the bouncer to let us in (they used to let you in if you had a “parent” to vouch for you). The drive to Kihei a full 45 min from Haiku hill. Her mom was passive to her, let her change the radio as she pleased. Eva finished me up in that car ride - dusted bronzer on my collarbone and in my very small cleavage gap (barely there) peeking from the tube top she had dressed me in. Hapa’s Club was NOT at all what Eva expected – the reggae bands, the weed-smokey, dark, one-room “club” was nothing like what Cali could sport but it we still had fun. Our roles switched a bit – she was suddenly the tall white girl in an slanted-eye/ brown skin territory and her city clothes with Ralph Lauren perfume stood out against flip flops, tshirts, and the plumeria smell from locals wearing the flower in their ear.

“Drop your knees, Eva,” I instructed her. “Then pop up like this, kinda swing,” I showed her the slow-skank. “Skanking” was the only way to dance to the 4 note beats – island style. You’d only know if you ever saw it, otherwise, it’s impossible to describe. She was a hit. Local guys were trying to dance with her – and she was taking it in, open minded, fast learner. No one seemed to know what to do with a white hottie like that, red lips, red nails, 12 going on 22, full jewelry in heels with height beyond every part-Asian there.

So, we didn’t end up “getting a boy” (or her number getting asked for) like she hoped. I loved being with her though, she was worth it all - I could care less about a boy… I savor those days - because one day I DID choose boys over her and I’d never make another tight-skirt-slutty music video with her again… one day I did finally learn why she shaved my bikini line and legs and my innocence would leave and so would those Romi and Michelle movie nights with her… those half-sad days that girls start to become women. I’d never forget her though… those intimate days in life where you find what you are capable of and what people are like in their most naked experiences- it’s what fuels us the rest of outer lives… those strong bonds, those times of vulnerability, testing, learning, teaching, touching, tasting - in my mind I’ll always remember those early days of periods and crop tops as Hella Fine.

xoxo

*Please note that this read is meant to be entertaining, not necessarily factual

June 25, 2022 /Naomi Cooper
Hawaii Teens, Maui Life, Growing Up in Hawaii
Hawaii Life, Before Kids, Soul Search, Childhood

Mahalo

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