Two hours to carry it home as practice, not as theory.
A two-hour online training devoted to the Hawaiian practice of forgiveness and reconciliation — held live over Zoom, with the phrases and framework you might recognize from the free course met here by a facilitator in the room. A standalone door for first comers. A deepening for those who've already walked the free path and are ready to feel it worked through their system. Held twice a month, accessible from anywhere.
Two kinds of people walk in. Both find a door.
You don't need prior exposure. The two-hour training stands on its own. You'll leave with the lineage, the framework, and the practice — enough to work with immediately and enough to know if the deeper path calls.
You already know the shape. This is the practice held live — in a room with a facilitator, with specific situations of your own, with the kind of presence that video cannot carry. The material meets your system where text stopped.
Three phases. Carried in the Bray lineage.
See the belief — personal, familial, inherited — and the system holding it. Reconciliation begins where the story is visible.
"I forgive you." "Please forgive me." The work runs both ways. Holding one without the other leaves the knot half-tied.
The old connection released. In the clean space that opens, a healthy one is reestablished in the present moment.
Three phases, one practice — taught as the Bray lineage carries it.
Three words that name why the practice exists — and what each level of separation calls for.
Missing the mark.
An unintentional error — the small slip that still made separation.
Wrongdoing.
Harmful action taken with awareness — heavier, and calling for more of the practice.
Defilement.
The deepest damage — where the practice must go slow, thorough, and witnessed.
The Bray lineage of Hawaiian Ho'oponopono — carried through Daddy Bray, Uncle George Na'ope, Tad James, and Matt James. What was kept. What was refined.
Memory, identity, and the work beneath the words — why this is called reconciliation, not merely forgiveness.
Guided work with what you bring into the room. The specific memory. The specific person. The specific pattern.
Four hours held as one continuous arc.
If something recurs.
If someone is still in you, years after.
If forgiveness has felt technical, prescriptive, or far away.
This is an afternoon about what forgiveness actually does.
Peace begins with me.
A live two-hour training, held online via Zoom — twice a month.
Offered at $197.
Seats are few. Dates and location are sent first to those who reserve.
Other doors open from here
No. The afternoon stands on its own. Those who've done the free course arrive with a head start on the framework; those who haven't are brought through it in the room. Both are welcomed into the practice.
No. The four-phrase form is a later simplification of the practice. What we teach here is the Bray lineage: three phases — belief and system, forgiveness in both directions, and cord cutting — framed by the Hawaiian Code of Forgiveness (Hala, Hewa, 'Ino). The fuller form does more of what Ho'oponopono was meant to do.
Not unless you choose to. The inward work is yours; the framework and guidance are shared in common. You bring the specific; you keep what you keep.
There are doors. The Huna 1-Day, 2-Day, and 3-Day workshops hold more. The Huna Mastery membership holds ongoing practice in community. You'll have a sense by the end of the afternoon which, if any, is yours.
Numen Lumen is a wisdom-tradition school. This event is a learning workshop — not clinical supervision, therapy, medical care, or a licensed clinical service. Ho'oponopono is a practice of reconciliation; it is not a replacement for trauma therapy or mental health care. For matters of mental or physical health, please reach out to an appropriate licensed professional.