SKATEBOARDING & WRITING: NOT SO DIFFERENT AFTER ALL?

April 10, 2014/ / ARTICLES/ Comments: 23

photo: brian gaberman & emerica

photo: brian gaberman & emerica

I was in a lengthy rut of writer’s block that might have lasted till I died were it not for Sean Sheffey. Because one night, I watched Sheffey’s part in Questionable and then I yelled in delight and was later able to put down many hundred words. That night, writing felt very fine and natural. I think this change came because the video part awakened some lost comfort in my own writing. Reason being, if Sean Sheffey – who wore giant near-clown pants and looked like he might punch the ground after every trick– could put out many incredible parts, then I could forego my own “style worries”. I could write the writing I wanted to write.

And if Sean Sheffey, a skateboarder, could free me from writer’s block, then there has to be some connection between skateboarding and writing. I think, actually, that there are a lot of connections. The writer’s struggle is very much the skateboarder’s struggle, the skateboarder’s joy is very similar to the writer’s joy. Let me explain:

david foster wallace

david foster wallace / photo: dovesandserpants

Both Attract & Create Social Misfits

Skateboarders have a long history of being weirdos and so do writers: there are drug-addicts (Rober Louis Stevenson, Stephen King, Philip K. Dick, Aldous Huxley, Hunter S. Thompson), suicides (David Foster Wallace, Virginia Woolf, Ernest Hemingway, Hart Crane, the list goes on and on) and more than anything, people who have a hard time being around other people. My theory is that getting good at skateboarding or writing demands falling into yourself, and thus isolates practitioners from the rest of society. Both of these activities demand such insular practice, that it only seems reasonable for so many writers and skateboarders to be pretty weird. This is not by any means a bad thing. Skateboarder weirdness and writer weirdness are what create the tight communities that exist in both pursuits.

emerica made premiere / photo: tactics board shop

emerica made premiere / photo: skatewarehouse

Doing and Being Seen

Writers and skateboarders share the desire to do, and to be seen doing. In both of these pursuits, we can gain the same feeling of doing the thing, simply by viewing the thing. And let me say, as a guy who makes noises while watching skate videos and while reading, reacting so strongly to any kind of work is somewhat-miraculous.

The processes of writing a book and filming a skate video are also similar. You work tirelessly at your craft until reaching an initial point of proficiency (being able to skate well/write well), then you work and work until there’s a few precious moments of peak performance. As any writer or skateboarder will tell you, the rest is throwaway.

leo romero "skating" at a demo / photo: foxxxy

leo romero “skating” at a demo / photo: foxxxy

Pro Delusions

A lot of skateboarders dream about going pro at some point in their lives, and both writers and skaters share the idea that being recognized for their craft would be paradise. This might be true for a time, but it doesn’t necessarily last. For many skaters and writers, the pursuit of joy instead becomes a pursuit for perfection. The daily work can become so emotionally demanding that each difficult period becomes a tragedy. Doing one singular thing for so long, even if it’s something they’ve always loved, may make it hard for pro skaters or writers to actually enjoy the activity they fell in love with in the first place.

cardiel / scan courtesy of chromeball

cardiel / photo: bryce kanights

Importance of Style

Developing personal style in skateboarding is very similar to developing personal style in writing. Both processes involve assimilating outside influences into our own approaches. We see how Carroll does that thing with his hands, and our bodies likely try to emulate that. And when an author says something particularly striking, writers note the “how” of what was said and subconsciously move it into common practice. The progression of style in writers and the progression of style in skateboarders also follows similar paths.

When they begin skateboarding, most people are drawn to the big things (halfpipes, back flips, giant rails, etc). These “stunts” generally lack the nuance that we grow to appreciate later. With reading too, casual readers derive the most enjoyment out of relatively straightforward, “stunt-like” works. As most skateboarders and writers grow, the style of execution grows in importance. Watching Gonz ollie off a curb doesn’t have the wow factor that a kickflip off a roof has, but there is something important that makes us return to it. It’s his style; the combination of movements and dress and the feeling that we are seeing the real Mark, simply by watching him move, that makes the ollie important. Good style in writing has the same effect. There are only so many tricks to be done and only so many stories to be told: many of us reach a point where the execution of the thing trumps the thing itself.

Skateboarding has one beautiful advantage over reading: it makes almost every participant into scholar. Skateboarding has created an army of aesthetic commentators; there are schools of skate “art critics” in a demographic that may have never liked museums or academia. In contrast, only a small portion of people ever get deep enough into reading to really figure out what styles they value. And an even smaller portion get together and discuss it in groups, as most skateboarders naturally do.

jason lee ollie / scan courtesy of chromeball

jason lee ollie / scan courtesy of chromeball

If none of this is convincing of skateboarding’s artfullness, consider the fact that Josh Kalis said that he almost cried when he saw the Alien Workshop section in The Cinematographers Project, the fact that people scream out in excitement at video premieres, the fact that one Youtube commenter on Jovantae Turner’s part would pause the VHS to study the shadow of a tre-flip because it looked to him like Jesus Christ.

While none of these responses are strictly academic, they show that we consider skateboarding to be artful, in the same sense that literature is. Not that anyone really needs to be convinced of this, but skateboarding is not a stupid thing. And if it is, it is only a stupid thing in the sense that all art is stupid. And moreover, it would be good for the public to acknowledge – when they’re shouting at us, when they’re calling the police on the kids who are for fuck’s sake are not really kids anymore, who are cursing and making noise at night, who are destroying their granite… that something meaningful is going on. That we are feeling something vital here, assholes.

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Comments

  1. asd

    April 10, 2014 7:40 pm

    I study theoretical math and I think there’s a lot of similarities between it and skateboarding.

    -There are many subdisciplines and some are not as “hot” as others. This has professional ramifications

    -You work extremely hard on something which often seems totally pointless, and anyone who’s any good has spent many hours just working on it by themselves. That feeling when something works, though…

    -The profession is largely merit-based but you can’t escape politics

    -People on the outside don’t really understand it and have a narrow view of what the culture and practice is like, thanks to popular media (The show Big Bang Theory is basically the equivalent of gnarbro energy drink televised skate competions for technical academics)

  2. Máté

    April 12, 2014 6:27 am

    “To me, skateboarding is art”
    the Gonz

  3. Steeveskates

    April 16, 2014 7:02 pm

    This article was awesome and helped me with a writing project I have been stewing over for a few days. I went for a quick skate remembered reading this article and came here to elaborate more from the academic side of things(English student)
    Building a skateboard “bag of tricks” functions relatively the same way that language functions.
    The basis of language as understood by some literary scholars is language as a set of signs. Since this is the internet I’ll use a cat for example (personally a dog would be better or maybe a beer). I guess I’ll use the Signifier of Beer. When we hear, or read the word we get a concept/image, say for example Pabst pops into our heads this mental image of beer is the Signified (or what we associate with the sound image) these two parts then act as myth like Drinking beer is fun!

    Signifier Signified Myth

    Beer——————————> PABST ———————-> skateboarders like pabst
    drinking beer is fun

    How in gods name does this compare to learning skateboard tricks?
    If you’re a nerd, or take forever to learn things this might make sense.
    Lets use a crooked grind for example.
    First we have to learn the signifier we have to figure out how to ollie and not just ollie on flat ground, but to ollie on to things, probably going to want to learn bs 50-50’s maybe even some noseslides. Now that we have our ollies figured out we try to lock into the signified trick (this is probably going to take a little bit, you’re gonna slip out, etc.) but your brain is making the connection between the first step in the process and the second. The signifier and the signified (without the ollie or signifier the grind or signified never exists) come together and as you’re rolling away you’ve completed the “myth” and now crooked grind becomes ‘your trick’
    Maybe you crack a beer, and dump some out for Mr. Rolland Barthes and his life of work.

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