An embarrassing confession from a beach lover
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Lolita Harper
I have a horrible confession to make. I am not proud of it and know
many of you will disavow me as your community columnist for hiding
such a criminal past. I only hope you understand that I am working to
overcome this issue and plan to get back on the right track as soon
as possible.
I felt the weight of my past on Friday as I walked along the
beach. It was the first day the sun had shone through the dark clouds
in a week. The rain had ceased, and I was again reminded that I live
in paradise. I looked out onto the water, as it thrashed softly
against the sand.
It was then I made the commitment to myself to change my foolish
ways:
“I am going to learn how to surf,” I vowed.
How I could have grown up in Southern California (a few years in
Costa Mesa, the rest in Irvine) and not have taken up the sport, I
don’t know.
I was born on the Gulf of Mexico and was in the ocean at 3 months
old. I have never lived more than 20 minutes from the beach (except
for four torturous college years) and wore flip-flops so often as a
child that a permanent gap grew between my first and second toes.
I could swim by the age of 3 and was fearless in the water. I
would venture out so far into the ocean that my mom had to make the
knee-high rule, which I always bent to waist-high.
“You are my little fish,” my mom would tell me.
I have no siblings, but was always very close with a brood of
rowdy boy cousins. I was the only girl. We used to stay in the water
until our toes and fingers looked like raisins, triple-dog-daring
each other to venture farther and farther into the ocean.
I always won. Chickens.
As time went on, our beach trips changed, and we ditched our
boogie boards and fins. My cousins replaced theirs with surfboards,
and I traded mine in for a bottle of tanning lotion.
The sun was out, and it was my calling to worship it. I would not
get my hair wet and, quite frankly, my swimsuits could no longer
withstand the rigorous water torture I once subjected them to. I was
a bonafide beach bunny and I was content watching the boys, instead
of outperforming them.
High school brought long hours of softball and soccer practice,
studying, college entrance exams and applications, and the beach
seemed like a distant luxury. Later, I was stranded inland at USC
without a car and didn’t make it to the beach for years. A year of
living in the San Fernando Valley, and I was dying to come back to my
coastal roots.
“What do you mean it takes an hour and 20 minutes to get to the
beach?”
Now I am back. Back where the ocean breeze chills the cool night
air and you can smell the salt. My sun-worshiping days are over, and
my drive to take on another athletic challenge is heightening. I
still play softball and soccer and have started boxing. It is time to
add surfing to my athletic resume.
My little cousin Aaron -- a freshman at Newport Harbor High School
-- is an avid surfer, and I am tempted to join him, like I should
have joined my older kinfolk years ago.
Nearly every guy I know here surfs. Everywhere I go, I hear people
talking about the waves, the offshore this and onshore that.
Surfing is a major part of this community. One of my interview
questions from editors Tony Dodero and S.J. Cahn was, “Do you surf?”
What kind of local columnist would I be if I didn’t experience one
of the best things this area has to offer. I wouldn’t be doing my job
if I did not learn how to surf.
So, if you see some girl out on the beach with a board in hand and
a confused look on her face, come on over, say hi, and help me
overcome this embarrassing shortcoming.
* LOLITA HARPER writes columns Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays
and covers culture and the arts. She may be reached at (949) 574-4275
or by e-mail at [email protected].
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