Skater Eyes

April 11th, 2009
Playground

Playground

Two weeks ago, I bought a skateboard.  Before that purchase, I spent a grand total of about 5 minutes of my life on skateboards, spread over four or five separate occasions and probably about 10 years.  On all but one occasion I bailed horribly and hilariously.  The last time I tried was in Uganda, at the skate park my friend Brian helped to build.  It’s the only skate park in Uganda, and the only skate park in Africa outside of South Africa.  After my ridiculous fall, one of the local kids patted me on the back and said “Now you are Buganda!“  Tribal initiation by concrete.

But that’s not what this post is about.  Still, I recommend checking out the above links, because they’ve got a lot of rad photos of African kids really shredding.  They’re totally ‘core.  The last link is a video that Brian put together.

No, this post is about the “Skater Eyes” that I’m starting to develop.  I’ve always been quite aware of the “caps” that are put on the edges of curbs, benches, or handrails (basically they’re little knobs that stick out, preventing a skater from sliding along said edge with their board), but I’ve been less aware of generally skatable surfaces.  All this is changing, now.  The image I’ve attached was taken a couple years ago in Richmond, it’s the empty parking lot of the Lansdowne Centre.  I took the photo because I was disgusted at the magnitude of emptiness.  Parking lots kill communities and green spaces, while encouraging the use of cars (which also kill communities and greenspaces, among other things).  That particular parking lot takes at least five minutes to traverse.

While I still hold the belief that the last thing the world needs is more parking lots, I’m starting to suffer some cognitive dissonance - because such a giant parking lot would be a lot of fun to skate around on.  Since I am still not yet skilled enough to do anything more than push myself around in large circles, big flat surfaces like the Lansdowne parking lot are attractive, now.  My neighbourhood, which I love so much, is terrible for skating.  The roads are old, bumpy, and occasionally potholey.  The same goes for the sidewalks.  It’s got lots of hills.  It’s largely residential, though there plenty of grocery stores, restaurants, and shops just a couple blocks away.  The only parking lots are at schools, and are small, cracked, and often occupied (except on weekends).  In other words: you can’t skate here!  There’s nowhere to go!

Having a skateboard almost makes me wish that I lived in a residential neighbourhood in the suburbs.  Smooth roads, driveways, very little traffic, and giant parking lots.  The very things that I have grown to hate are suddenly appealing.  It must be true what they say: Skateboards really do corrupt the youth.  Maybe I’ll take up smoking, next.

Joy in Living

February 4th, 2009
Morning Desolation

Morning Desolation

A change of pace.

Whether or not it’s true, I see myself as a depressive personality.  I am a realist, but realism begets pessimism.  Finding joy is difficult when you look at the big picture.

Yes, every day children are born and love flourishes.  But every day hearts are broken and children die - of starvation, preventable diseases, war.  Humans are the cause of the greatest mass extinction in 65 million years.  We’ve left the planet teetering on the edge of unpreventable environmental disaster.  Reasons to be happy are far outnumbered by reasons to despair.  It’s hard to plan for a future when you don’t believe there will be one.

One birthday, at a time when everything was perfect in my life, I spent the daylight hours trapped between anger and tears, unable to leave bed until the afternoon.  I was frustrated by the sheer blindness of humanity, the inability of so many people to care about anything more than themselves.  That day, I was saved by dedicated friendship and takoyaki.  On other days it’s other things.

Somehow, despite everything, happiness creeps in.  It’s as essential to existence as it is unexpected.  I had the fortune of experiencing a taste of that euphoria on saturday, fighting off the remains of a minor hangover, blinking at the sun in a bus shuttling me to Burnaby.  It was the best I’d felt in months.  I locked onto the feeling, seared it into my brain.  The problems of the world were no less.  They hadn’t left my mind, and I cared no less passionately about them - but nothing could upset me.  Not the thicket of parked cars, nor the poisonous consumerism that hummed in the mall in which I found myself.  In times of future despair, I will summon that memory, remember why joy had returned.

So where did it come from?  The concert I’d been to two nights before?  The drinking and long-missed friendship from the previous evening?  The sun?  The egg-on-toast breakfast?  The anticipation of seeing another friend and helping her move to a new home?  Everything, to be sure.  I contemplated that warm happiness, but it wasn’t diminished by the exercise.

Joy comes in possibilities.  The world might end (not with a bang, or a whimper, but with a long, drawn-out moan), but it is within our capabilities to prevent it.  Since the past few decades, and for the first time in human existence, there exist the means to provide every basic necessity of life to every living person.  That society is structured in a way directly opposed to that provision is an obstacle, but the possibility alone brings hope.  That compassion exists at all is reason enough to fight for the continuation of the human experiment.

Joy must be cultivated and maintained.  This is difficult, and I am a novice.  To be bitter, grumpy, or despairing comes easily, but it fatigues and cripples when sustained.  A world-weary fighter is easy to defeat, a happy one is a resilient enigma.  Being joyful does not preclude struggle or seriousness, nor does it require ignoring others or accepting the world as it is.  Indeed, the world today is completely unacceptable.  The world is repugnant, sick, dying.  It doesn’t have to be.  This is where we will derive our fuel.

We need an army of jocular warriors, conscientious and serious and observant.  The big picture never leaves their minds, the fine details are not forgotten.  Despair is not ignored or suppressed, but accepted.  It becomes an ally, a motivator, the very reason to be joyful.  Training begins now.  Why didn’t anyone ever tell me that happiness is a weapon?

(In related news, I think I’m finally starting to understand Paul Tillich.)