Reiki, tell your friends
by Sera Sloane
Over Día de los Muertos, I received a clear message: Reiki — tell your friends. Not as noise, but as shared knowledge.
Día de los Muertos has always been a time when lineage feels close — when what’s been carried before us feels present again. This year, the message landed gently but firmly. Reiki is meant to be shared. Passed hand to hand. Practiced in everyday life.
Learning Reiki, Carrying Lineage
I’m currently learning Reiki from Faith Streng, and through the process I learned something that stopped me in my tracks: Madame Takata, who brought Reiki to the West, passed away the same year I was born — 1980.
That timing mattered to me. Not as a title, not as a claim – but as a frequency. Some teachings don’t disappear when a teacher leaves. They move. They wait. They find new hands.
I feel called to carry that frequency forward in my own way — through learning, humility, practice, and sharing — Reiki as something lived, not performed.
Reiki in the Collective Memory
Most people already recognize Reiki, even if they don’t have the language for it. There’s that well-known moment in The Karate Kid when Mr. Miyagi places his hands on Daniel to continue the fight — calm, focused, restorative. It isn’t formally Reiki, but it is energy healing: intentional touch, presence, and regulation offered in real time. That scene stayed with people because it showed healing as accessible. Human. Learnable.
The Yin Yang Collection
This is why CLUB ANGEL STUFF is launching the Yin Yang Collection now. The yin yang represents balance — giving and receiving, effort and rest, city and spirit. It’s a symbol that holds complexity without needing to explain itself.
The collection includes:
A baby onesie, because balance and care start at the beginning — holding softness and strength at the same time.
A REIKI t-shirt inspired by Madame Takata, honoring lineage, transmission, and the quiet discipline of healing work.
“I Yin Yang LA” t-shirt, a quiet love letter to Los Angeles — its light and shadow, movement and stillness (adult + kid szs).
“I Yin Yang LA” bucket hat, for daily balance on the go — sun, shade, city walks, beach days, and everything in between.
“I Yin Yang LA” isn’t a tourist statement. It’s about balance in place — the contrast of intensity and softness, movement and stillness, sunlight and shadow. It speaks to living here with awareness, not domination. To loving a city without trying to conquer it.
It’s an expression of alignment — staying receptive while moving forward, rooted while evolving. A way of saying this place holds me as much as I hold it.
If you’re looking to study Reiki beyond the basics, The Art of Psychic Reiki explores how energetic practice can open intuitive channels through attention, discipline, and care.
Angels and Self-Healing
We believe angels want people to learn Reiki so they can heal themselves — through steady, thoughtful care that honors the body’s own timing. Reiki teaches listening. It teaches presence. It teaches that your hands already know how to help.
Maybe that’s the real message I received: Tell your friends — because this isn’t meant to stay quiet. It’s meant to move.