Yesterday Jesse Aizenstat came on the show to tell us about what it was like surfing from Israel to Lebanon.
Apparently – because he couldn’t find work – he had to settle for pitching a book idea to a surf magazine. I guess it was that or McDonald’s. Now while his command over language leaves much to be desired, there is a nugget of truth to the genesis of his book. And that truth is the Ocean.
You’ll noticed I capitalized it – Ocean. Consider it a sign of deference. I’m from an Ocean town, way out on the tip of Long Island. Surf Capitol of the east coast. Most of my childhood was spent in and around the Ocean. When I was probably way too young, my parents would drag me out into the Ocean, through the break, and spin me around to face the shore. On days where there was a swell, the shoreline vanishes and re-emereges behind the blue rolling hills. We’d watch as people fought fruitlessly against its power, against its current, against its will.
It’s amazing the different plans of attack you see at the Ocean, from people who are so clearly unprepared to deal with it. Grown men and women who obviously can barely swim, with their hands held high in pre-surrender, kids in goggles whose parents clearly left them woefully unprepared, people holding their noses and trying to sit down in some imaginary safety-chair, people with their tee-shirts on taking the waves full-bore in the face, and tumbling backwards. There’s something very telling about the way a person reacts to the Ocean, how well they swim, how they time their dives, when they come up for air – it doesn’t just tell you about them, it tells you about the culture they were brought up in. Out east, there are kids 5 and 6 years old that skip across the Ocean’s surface like flattened stone, barely grazing the water as they trace their path. By the time they’re approaching their teens, they’re waiting with bated breath for a hurricane to pass by, so they can play in it’s wake. The culture raises their kids to be comfortable in the water, because for generations the Ocean sustained the town.









