Mickey:
Dude, that account of Laird's post stress accounting of the wave he rode really hit me - your description of Laird sitting down and crying after he rode that wave. I know he has that irresistable compulsion of an extreme sport participant, a compulsion to push things to its limits - limits of danger and limits of sanity.
I think it's called the tower. It's the world's tallest sheer cliff face in the same mountain range as K2 in Pakistan (I think).
I watched on PBS a guy crouched looking over that edge, he slowly tipped himself forward and lept out into the void, falling, falling, falling, then opened his parachute and sailed down.
I can imagine Laird feeling the grip of death catching up to him - literally surfing out of the jaws of death, blasted out in that in that gargatuan spray.
I bet he was re-experiencing that ride and witnessing his own death, and living it out and I bet those tears were flowing.
Jackie Chan is another guy who pushes it in the stuntman arena. He continues to push the envelope.
Laird is top dog in big wave surfing, inheriting the mantle from men like Ken Bradshaw who's exploits at Waimaia, Sunset and other places are legendary. He was the only guy who would duck-dive 25' Sunset.
I fear for these guy's lives, but they'd tell you that, for them, it's not really life if you're not feeling the juice of pushing it. More like purgatory, waiting and planning and dealing until those extreme moments are attained.
Climbers of Everest and other mountains have no regrets of their exploits, even when half the group perishes from an unexpected and vicious storm. They had to do it - it's simply their nature.
I won't be surprised if Jackie Chan dies making one of his movies. I pray it doesn't happen, but that's what happens when you keep pushing it.
I'm rewatching that wave ride with my six year old daughter and am just in awe... Her first reaction was, "OH MY GOD..."
Thanks for posting the pic and link.
[Edited by Gargoyle on 10-12-2000 at 12:24 AM]
Dude, that account of Laird's post stress accounting of the wave he rode really hit me - your description of Laird sitting down and crying after he rode that wave. I know he has that irresistable compulsion of an extreme sport participant, a compulsion to push things to its limits - limits of danger and limits of sanity.
I think it's called the tower. It's the world's tallest sheer cliff face in the same mountain range as K2 in Pakistan (I think).
I watched on PBS a guy crouched looking over that edge, he slowly tipped himself forward and lept out into the void, falling, falling, falling, then opened his parachute and sailed down.
I can imagine Laird feeling the grip of death catching up to him - literally surfing out of the jaws of death, blasted out in that in that gargatuan spray.
I bet he was re-experiencing that ride and witnessing his own death, and living it out and I bet those tears were flowing.
Jackie Chan is another guy who pushes it in the stuntman arena. He continues to push the envelope.
Laird is top dog in big wave surfing, inheriting the mantle from men like Ken Bradshaw who's exploits at Waimaia, Sunset and other places are legendary. He was the only guy who would duck-dive 25' Sunset.
I fear for these guy's lives, but they'd tell you that, for them, it's not really life if you're not feeling the juice of pushing it. More like purgatory, waiting and planning and dealing until those extreme moments are attained.
Climbers of Everest and other mountains have no regrets of their exploits, even when half the group perishes from an unexpected and vicious storm. They had to do it - it's simply their nature.
I won't be surprised if Jackie Chan dies making one of his movies. I pray it doesn't happen, but that's what happens when you keep pushing it.
I'm rewatching that wave ride with my six year old daughter and am just in awe... Her first reaction was, "OH MY GOD..."
Thanks for posting the pic and link.
[Edited by Gargoyle on 10-12-2000 at 12:24 AM]
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