कोशिश गोल्ड - मुक्त
6 Lessons From The Sea
Spirituality & Health
|July/August 2017
After a couple of decades of surfing and traveling, and writing about surfing and traveling, these are six lessons that I use every day.

1. The struggle is the joy.
Videos and films make surfers look like we’re always cruising around, carefree, on crystalline waves, no work involved. But extremely little of each surf session is spent actually standing up on your surfboard on a wave—maybe 1 percent. Most of the time you’re paddling until your shoulders feel like they’re being cattle branded. If you’re looking to have a good time, it’s essential to find a way to enjoy paddling, or at least good-naturedly bear it. So surfing is life. The good stuff—chocolate and great sex and weddings and hilarious jokes—fills a minute portion of an adult lifespan. The rest of life is paddling: work, paying bills, flossing, getting sick, dying. But nobody ever found lasting joy from being fed beauty and riches and ease from a silver spoon. The sea has taught me that if I’m clear on where I’m going and why it’s good, the struggle is the joy. Plus, the burn helps you enjoy the good waves even more.
2. Celebrate. Let go.
Because those exceptional waves come along only once in a blue moon, I think it’s important to celebrate them. Hoot, high-five, shake your butt. Too-cool-for-school stoicism isn’t any fun. Recent neuroscience shows that the more positive emotion we bring to an experience, the more neurons fire and wire together, leaving our brains more optimistic and open. The flip side, however, is that if the waves are perfect today, you can bet a storm is coming. Clinging to good conditions is like trying to hold the sea still. It leads to frustration. So dance, sing, toast. Then let go of its ever happening again.
3. Never give up. Do question your approach.
यह कहानी Spirituality & Health के July/August 2017 संस्करण से ली गई है।
हजारों चुनिंदा प्रीमियम कहानियों और 10,000 से अधिक पत्रिकाओं और समाचार पत्रों तक पहुंचने के लिए मैगज़्टर गोल्ड की सदस्यता लें।
क्या आप पहले से ही ग्राहक हैं? साइन इन करें
Spirituality & Health से और कहानियाँ

Spirituality & Health
SILENCE & SOLITUDE
IN SILENCE AND SOLITUDE, we find the space to reflect on what has transpired in the year that is passing and what we plan to carry with us into the new year.
1 min
November/December 2025

Spirituality & Health
YOU CAN'T ALWAYS GET WHAT YOU WANT
You can curse your karma, or you can look at what it's trying to teach you.
6 mins
November/December 2025

Spirituality & Health
Naomi Westwater
HONORS GRIEF, SPIRIT, AND SONG
5 mins
November/December 2025

Spirituality & Health
SPIRITUAL PRACTICES FOR MANAGING CHRONIC PAIN
Discover how ancient wisdom and modern research converge to offer hope and healing beyond traditional medicine.
6 mins
November/December 2025

Spirituality & Health
GO YOUR OWN WAY
This woman ditched standard religious dogma in favor of a unique patchwork-style path that works for her.
6 mins
November/December 2025

Spirituality & Health
A CHRISTMAS GIFT TO EARTH
OVER THE YEARS, my take on Christmas has shifted a lot. I was taught it was a celebration of the birth of Jesus, but really it was all about the presents!
2 mins
November/December 2025

Spirituality & Health
OUR WIDELY DISTRIBUTED INTELLIGENCE ... AND OUR REMARKABLE ABILITY TO IGNORE IT
What happens when technology forces us to redefine human consciousness itself?
7 mins
November/December 2025

Spirituality & Health
A PATH FORWARD
IF YOU REMEMBER ONE THING from this column, remember this: Being out of harmony with your soul or with the demands of your spiritual nature is like having a rock in your shoe. It is going to bug you until you fix the situation. If you remember two things from this column, add this: Your soul is not about happiness. The rock in your shoe is not unhappiness. What our soul or spirit wants is to be fully present, innocent, and vulnerable to the vibrancy of life—to show up fully to life, whatever it brings.
4 mins
November/December 2025

Spirituality & Health
MUCH-NEEDED RECALIBRATION
RIGHT STORY, WRONG STORY: How to Have Fearless Conversations in Hell
3 mins
November/December 2025

Spirituality & Health
THE SMALL THINGS WE CARRY
I CAN’T REMEMBER HOW LONG I have been carrying protein bars or other snacks in my glove compartment. I do this so that when I come to a stoplight where a person is sitting with a cardboard sign in hand, sun in their eyes and shoes worn thin, I can easily pop open my glove box and offer what I have. It doesn't happen too often, yet it did the other day. I realized the position I was in and what I had stashed away. It's my chance to look someone in the eyes who likely is not used to having their humanity affirmed. For the length of a breath, we are just two people in the same world. Rarely are words exchanged, but the hands say enough. I know it's not a lot, and it is what I have.
2 mins
November/December 2025
Translate
Change font size