Surfing the Sea of Life

Surfing the Sea of Life Reiki & Life Coaching (1:1 sessions in person or via Skype) & group workshops to live a grounded, relaxed & connected life true to your values & beliefs

As a reiki practitioner I believe that we’re all energy and that energy can be transformed; as a life coach I believe that we have all of the answers inside of us waiting for the right environment to help us take action to achieve the life of our dreams. Together I believe that they form a winning combination to help people to understand their energy, the energy around them and to inspire them to

harness it, to make little tweaks and changes to bring themselves back into alignment and become their healthiest, happiest and most fulfilled. As the founder of Surfing the Sea of Life I believe that we have so much to learn from surfing. Like surfers in the ocean we can learn to understand the energy around us and within us that creates waves in our life. We can then start to recognise its frequency and vibration and learn how to harness this energy to ride the waves to our goals and dreams. We can learn how to predict obstacles and dangers and then learn how to go under or over them and how to keep ourself and others safe at the same time. We can learn how to be our healthiest so we can enjoy life to the max. We can learn how to look after our environment in a sustainable way to safeguard the playground of life for future generations. Some people want to surf big waves and some are happy with smaller ones. Things are messy and unpredictable in the sea of life but as long as we give life surfing a go and get back up when we fall off we’re going to learn a little bit more each day and have an amazing time. We were born to surf the sea of life, we do it naturally when we don’t think too much, it’s a skill that we’re all born with, we’ve just learnt some bad habits along the way. Some people do it naturally and some people take time to learn it. There’s so many amazing people out there who do well in some areas and not so well in other areas. We have so much to learn from each other to raise our expectation of what is actually possible and then go out there and smash the roof off! Join us here for stories of hope, inspiration, science, history and fun from other people, businesses, countries about how to surf the sea of life. It’s an all inclusive philosophy with love, understanding, acceptance and fun at it’s core.

Listen to this music and tell me it doesn't do something to your soul.When I first heard it, It felt like a perfect acco...
22/04/2026

Listen to this music and tell me it doesn't do something to your soul.

When I first heard it, It felt like a perfect accompaniment to connect us to Nature, to the Elements and to ground us back into our body and inspire us to feel the love and gratitude for the land we live on.

No matter where you are geographically, the Earth is our home. We're neighbours. From the same Tribe, no matter our roots.

So, whatever you're doing right now (even if you're reading this from the future!), please take a moment and acknowledge some of the reasons you're grateful for the Earth.

This touched me in so many ways......I'll leave it here for you to explore your own response to it 🐝https://www.facebook...
17/04/2026

This touched me in so many ways......

I'll leave it here for you to explore your own response to it 🐝

https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1CjpfSPptp/

Not a single bee was harmed to make it.
Her name is Luci Jockel. She is an American jewelry and metalsmithing artist based in Philadelphia, and what she created is one of the most extraordinary works of art you have probably never heard of.
It is called the Gold Veil.
The idea began when Jockel was studying mourning attire at the RISD Museum and came across something quiet and heartbreaking — workers cleaning a dead colony of honey bees from the museum's roof. The bees had not survived the winter. Jockel looked at those wings and saw something other people had swept away as waste.
She saw a way to honor them.
She reached out to beekeepers asking a simple question — had they lost their hives? One beekeeper, Paul Whewell, had lost his entire colony to a particularly harsh winter. He gave Jockel the wings. In return, she gave him her labor, helping him rebuild his colony from scratch. Through that exchange, she learned sustainable beekeeping from the inside — and continued it at home with her own father's hives.
She also collected wings from hives on the rooftops of the MAD Museum and the Brooklyn Museum in New York, tended by beekeeper Bruce Gifford. Bees across all these hives had perished from cold weather, mites, pesticides, and other natural causes. Every wing came from a bee that had already died. No bee was ever harmed for the sake of the art.
Then came the work itself.
Wing by wing. Archival glue. Patience measured in months. 20,000 wings in total, arranged with the precision and care of lace-making, building a veil long enough to drape over a human figure.
But Jockel did not do it alone. Reflecting the very nature of what she was honoring, she assembled a human "hive" — family members and friends working together — to help construct the Gold Veil. Just as a real bee colony depends on the cooperation of thousands of workers, so did the piece. That detail alone transforms the veil from a beautiful object into a living idea.
The result is breathtaking. The wings catch light the way gold does, translucent and shimmering, delicate enough to seem impossible. It looks as though it should not exist. That is the point.
The Gold Veil is a ceremony of mourning and a call for attention at the same time. Honey bees pollinate 85% of all vegetation on Earth. They are not just insects. They are infrastructure. Without them, the food systems that billions of people depend on begin to collapse. And yet 42% of bee colonies in the United States alone collapsed in a single recent year — lost to pesticides, parasites, habitat loss, and changing weather.
Jockel's work places that loss directly in front of you, in the most intimate way possible — wearing it.
Her art is recognized at the highest levels. She holds an MFA from the Rhode Island School of Design, was shortlisted for the American Craft Council Emerging Voices Award in 2019, and has been featured in Metalsmith Magazine and American Craft Magazine. The Smithsonian American Art Museum recognizes her work, and her pieces are held in collections including the RISD Museum and galleries in New Jersey and the Netherlands. She currently teaches Metalsmithing and Jewelry at Towson University, where she continues to shape how the next generation of artists thinks about materials, ethics, and the natural world.
What Luci Jockel built is not just a veil made of wings. It is a question worn on the body.
How much have we already lost without noticing? And what does it cost to pay attention before it is too late?

~Weird Wonders and Facts

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