I land in Los Angeles and head straight inland to Korea Town. For the next four days I will not
see the ocean. I will not even call my local surfy friends as I usually
do, looking for a little paddle out friendship. One of my co-workers
will offer me one of her boyfriend’s boards for a morning
quickie in Venice Beach but I will not have the time. I will instead settle for dawn shuffles up the street to the Korean baths to spend the otherwise surfable hours sweating and naked amongst geriatric Korean men, feeling conspicuously hairy.
Poolside, at the hotel, I will see children playing with their parents.
In particular one elderly toddler laying atop his mother, playing at her
face gently with his little pudgy hands, squeezing her cheek and
thumbing her bottom lip. This will remind me of those pesky lion cubs pawing at their
regal father before he swats them away in National Geographic films. I will miss my children at this point.
I will think about the ways to place an apple box. Among them Los Angeles, dead
flat, Chicago, on the side, and New York, on end. People from Chicago might try to convince me otherwise.
Amid the stucco and the peeling paint and the
derelict signage and the barbed wires around the mechanic shops and the
stubborn flora and the dirty feet of homeless men and the gas stations and the curious
placement of phenomenal restaurants there will be gems of streetside art, architecture
and history, peaking out, snuggled happily between the repetition of
stop lights, hidden with self-conscious regard among the parking spots.
I will finish my job and on the fifth day I will head south to visit my in-laws, including my 97 year old grandmother-in-law with whom I will stay up late one night, drinking gin and trading stories.
I will meet a friend at the big mall in La Jolla where he is buying a blue
suit reminiscent of Cary Grant’s in “North By Northwest.” I will recall Cary Grant's
penchant for wearing light blue socks. My brother was fond of
pointing out that he ascended and descended staircases as if they
were an escalator, a conversational anchor I would dishonesty adopt as
my own observation. The blue sock thing is all mine though.
We will surf Sunset Cliffs where the wind pressing against the north coast is
cut by orientation and kelp beds and where the big shelf of reef will be a
tactile pleasure while ambling out.
Bird Shit Rock. I’ll notice my friend has gotten very adept at surfing, having put in the time in real pursuit of the craft since the last time we surfed together. He is a biologist and a sailor and a free diver, having at some point collected bugs off the local floor and having been nabbed for it in a classic mix-up. He will tell me stories about recently dismembering rabbits on a bow-hunting
trip. Not tall, and handsomely barrel chested, he is conspicuously
attentive in giving driving directions from the passenger seat, a tic
that would be an eye-rolling offense if proffered by any less a traffic
tactician.
Miraculously, we will surf an in-between boil all to ourselves, my softtop lacking both wax and leash and my winter atrophy having reached a personal zenith of epidemic proportion, my legs a gentle mush of fleeting ingrown hairs
and stubbornly swollen joints. But I will manage a
few rides and even a full two footed, pin-legged body leaning turn on
my last wave, a miracle itself.
Wrapping our wetsuits in towels, I will tell my friend about being included
in a coffee table book about New York surfers. He will erupt in a snorting
laugh, “How’d you pull that off?”
“I dunno, I guess they needed someone in there who doesn’t surf.”
“Yeah, that makes sense. That’s your brand. It works. Mine are my pecs.”
“Stay on brand.”
“Gotta stay on brand.”
At dinner the chiropractor will confide in me that Kelly’s wave pool can crank a
few feet more and look like a different wave. A proper, critical wave. But they’re still working out the kinks so it’s not on offer yet. It would all seem pretty boring to me, except the idea that one could surf in
the middle of flat desert, miles from the ocean, a startling mental
displacement almost too rich to pass up; a cognitive dissonant
holiday scoring barrels nestled between meth labs and Indian casinos.
I will jump on a big trampoline on the ridge above Cardiff, facing the
dusty hills in the east that haven’t been colonized by identically ugly
houses. I will scare the bejesus out of my nephew by playacting an overly
aggressive silverback. By the time I drive away he will be sad to see me go.
I will get bumped to first class on the flight back to New York and instantly regret
ordering the quiche instead of the oatmeal as soon as I receive it. The
sausage will have cheese unappealingly baked into the middle.
My particular synesthesia, the one of mentally contorting any common
instance of sudden, off-beat repetitive clanging sounds (a car
back-firing, metal utensils landing on a hard floor, the banging of a
distant hammer) into an internal, opening drum gambit of D'yer Mak'er, will occur on three separate occasions over the seven days of travel.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
4 comments:
“I dunno, I guess they needed someone in there who doesn’t surf.”
Ha. Somewhere in that sentence is the title of my biopic. Hope all's all right, Toddy. Impressive how long you've kept EBNY going.
-Jeff DiNunzio
This trip is going to be an interesting tour so far from Los Angeles to Korea Town and it would be a great trip for travelers as well. affordable jfk parking deals
As seen on ABCs Shark Tank with Robert Herjavec. Hamboards handcrafted Surfskate boards land paddles bring Earth Surfing to the world.
skate surf
Thank you for writing such a thoughtful and insightful article. Your perspective on [topic] really opened my eyes to a new way of thinking.
Awakesurfcollective
Post a Comment