I’m serious, don’t. Make some dinner plans instead. Pick up a good book, illegally download an album, masturbate, or maybe start re-watching The Sopranos. There are a million and one other enjoyable things you can do besides just skating. And, be honest, do you actually want to go skate anyways? Or did you grab your board out of some misplaced sense of obligation to the skateboard brands and magazines that won’t stop shouting: “Skate and Destroy,” “Burn Forever,” and “SkateEveryDamnDay”?
We love chastising each other whenever we choose to do anything that isn’t skateboarding — dating, studying, even working to get enough money to buy a skateboard – yet we also define skateboarding as an expression of absolute freedom…
Take a second to think of all your favorite skate legends, and why you hold them in such high regard. Would you really be as psyched on Tom Penny’s High-5 part as much if he put out three identical parts in the preceding years? I have a friend who loves Danny Renaud, not just for his skating, but because he didn’t give a shit about it enough to stop partying until he fell off a building. Jason Dill filmed a “Day in the Life” consisting of little more than coffee and cigarettes. Heath Kirchart fucking retired to bike and sail the world. Even The Gonz and Daewon Song stepped away from the culture for a few years in the 90s. Many of our skate legends are legends because they take time to immerse themselves in life outside of the skatepark.
As we grow older, we all rely on routines and comfort zones to get us through life, but skateboarding should be a respite from the daily grind, not another pattern to fall into. Some of my family members are gym rats, and they love bragging about waking up at five in the morning to work out, planning elaborately nutritious meals, and charting their progress toward arbitrary #SwollGoals. I never want to think of my skateboarding as a training regimen I have to adhere to, every Tuesday and Thursday from 7:00 P.M. to 9:00 P.M., and I never want to feel obligated to go skateboarding simply because a brand’s marketing scheme tells me I should.
The more time you spend off your board, the more you’ll appreciate the time you spend on it. So, take time to pursue other projects and interests, should the opportunities arise. Skip the session and go to a concert! Learn to paint! Foster another skill or talent for a few weeks or months! Shit, if you really want to, get drunk before noon! I can’t speak for everyone involved, but I have way more fun when I’m scheduling my skateboarding around my life, not scheduling my life around skateboarding, and if my adult life starts to inhibit my ability to go skate for several hours a day, so be it. It’ll only make the time I do get to skate more precious. Appreciate the spontaneity of the craft, how magical it can be when it’s unregimented and unserious.
So if you wanna “Skate or Die” that’s fine, but if you wanna “Skate From Time to Time” that’s cool too. What better way to celebrate skateboarding’s fuck-it-all ethos of freedom than by choosing, sometimes, not to skate?
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October 10, 2017 2:53 pm
This was one of the more enlightening articles and I greatly appreciate everything Jenkem does.
October 10, 2017 3:38 pm
Well written. I guess I needed this articles to remind myself that it’s all good and it’s alright the way skateboarding happens in my life nowadays. It was a great routine back in high-school days to have a session every day after school with homies, but I really do appreciate skateboarding even more now when I’m older and whenever I get the chance to skate or meet them. I guess the culture nowadays needs this the most because we’ve moved away from the freedom within the expression and the broad variety of different personalities in skateboarding. It does look like regimen of skatepark visits, exhausting skate sessions of prepared lines and runs, contests and jock fest. At least in the media side of skateboarding. The “cool guys” have been replaced with generic and boring ones. Once again we need to identify skateboarding with art rather than the sport. As you pick up something else, you see the similarities and how they benefit each other. Skateboarding should always be spontaneous.
October 10, 2017 3:56 pm
Great read as always. Thanks Jenkem! <3
October 10, 2017 4:47 pm
This is just a marketing campaign to get people to skate less so they get on the computer and go to this website more.