They are tiny figures on the outside sandbar, straddling their surfboards, heads bobbing up with each oncoming wave, and then obscured again behind the froth.
I know how it feels, this waiting. It’s not like other
kinds of waiting, waiting for a traffic light to turn, waiting in the grocery
store line, waiting for school day’s final bell.
It’s waiting for the future, waiting to see the heft of the
wave, the promise of the day’s best ride as the sea moves beneath your board
and lifts you up and it’s up to you to see where you go and what you do
And sometimes it’s a bubbling brute of whitewater that
pushes you off the board and into the drink and depending on the wave size, how
much time you spend cartwheeling until you emerge to find your board.
These young surfers out there today, they wear leashes and
their boards spin with them and sometimes into them.
In the 1960s, the boards were bigger and unleashed, could
whack you good if close enough, the skeg or fin a sharp knife that can leave a
mark.
My surf life was short, a high school thing that I left
behind in my twenties and I don’t know why.
Some of today’s surfers will be out on the waves in twenty
years – remember how young you were at 37, half my age now? At 17, 37 is
forever years away, 74 is so far down the line that it doesn’t exist except among
those old people who clog the roads as you speed to the beach before the waves
get blown out.
Age beached me. I can’t walk. I can swim with a floatation
device. I can get to the beach by car and use my walker to get to the water,
let it lick my toes, take me back to 1967 when a December day with waves was good
enough but not as glorious as a July day with surf and 80-degree water and my
fellow surfers surround me and I spy my girlfriend pull up and park and she
waves and I return the wave and feel as if I will live forever this way, a
young man in the ocean, just waiting for the next wave.
2 comments:
The surfboard I bought at Ron Jon's Cocoa Beach in 1972 is in my basement. Remember getting up before dawn and driving the Bee Line expressway from Orlando to Cocoa to catch the waves. Did not get injured there, but when I went with my brother to California, I got a head bump from the board and a scar I still have from the Skeg. Good times!
Good times. We all got a few bonks on the head. You're one of the lucky ones with a skeg scar.
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