Sunday, 19 November 2017

Surfing with Sartre: An Aquatic Inquiry into a Life of Meaning by Aaron James




All quotes from Aaron's book



Freedom, for the surfer, isn't radical self-determination but a kind of achievement, in adaptive attunement.  It's a way of being efficacious without control, precisely by giving up any need for it. 



Surfers go along with the flow of a wave by intuitive sensing, by attuning to their surroundings with their whole bodies and not simply their brains or eyeballs.  This turns out to be the highest expression of human perceptual capacity, the human's way of at once being and doing. … This is a relatively easy route to self-transcendence, thank goodness.  Attunement comes by faithful practice, but without the Buddhist's hard road to enlightenment, the abnegation of desire, any radical loss of the self, and without all the effort in constant "mindfulness", or in striving for personal perfection.  The surfer just goes surfing and with relative ease transcends him-or-herself in a dynamic, attuned bodily relationship to the world outside.



Surfing is less a matter of asserting one's will than of transcending it, by standing ready to revise one's best-laid plans, according to what the ocean is offering.  And unless one surfs from a sense of one's relative powerlessness, one simply can't attunedly adapt to each coming moment of wave.



"Power surfing" comes not from will power, or mere force, but from perception, intuition, and anticipation -- from one's sense that the ocean and its waves are to be not controlled but respected, and so read and answered, in an adaptive relationship.



The surfer wisdom for success as a person is this: Take it easier.  Accept. Persist.  Focus.  Leave time.  Don't compare.  And mix things up.



There will be good luck and bad luck, and the thing to do, in either case, is accept what has happened and flow through the different moments, in each case doing the next right thing.  This is how to "create your own luck" -- with no magic, no powers to control the future through "intention" in some more mystical sense.  Simply persist in attuned adaptation.  Focus on something worthy, and stick to a rough plan for its realization, while staying open to its gradual refinement or its deeper reconceptualization.  Trust your noticing.



Success comes precisely by giving up the aim of control and staying attuned, even in wait.



The thing to do when a frustrated desire persists -- "the middle way"-- is to simply accept that much unhappiness: to be as happy as you can be by being willing to be as unhappy as you are.



If a complete book of surfing's rules could be written, it wouldn't necessarily help unless you could also learn the "know-how" that comes in faithful practice.  You could read and understand all of its instructions, grasp them intellectually, and still not know how to put any rule into action.  As a new wave situation presents itself, you have to know how to go on in the next moment.



The attuned surfer and the attuned jazz player both mix passive waiting with active, present sensing, in a spontaneously adaptive activity founded on good timing.



Surfers often wonder in completely earnest puzzlement what in the world non-surfers are doing with their time.



With each new habit that I "hand over to the effortless custody of automatism" by practicing often, my thoughts are further freed fro the next level of attainment.  I can now pay even more exquisite attention.  The more I practice, the freer I am to take in new facets of my wave situation, and I become ever more attuned.  This is the ordinary basis of self-transcendence.



Surfer self-transcendence has a mundane foundation, in showing up to surf, day after day, in the routine of everyday practice.  The extraordinary thus depends on the ordinary, and if one loves the ecstatic, one also must honor its sturdier basis. 



All sensing, all perceptual awareness, is a matter of being embodied in a particular situation and knowing how to attunedly adapt one's body to one's environment.  That is, seeing wouldn't always come first, with action following.  Action would also shape seeing, or rather seeing would be action.



Consciousness is always consciousness of or about something else.



Being lost in a moment, ideally with no thought of ourselves, is anguish's medicine.



Being and staying present, especially while waiting, is improvisation's active motion, the very action of attunement. 



Because we see ourselves through the eyes of others, they have power to deny us the identity we'd like for ourselves.



Goodness and beauty come above everything, except for justice.



A flow is only as permanent as its underlying structure, and so may or may not be lasting or dependable.



The meaning of life is actually easy to answer, because mis-framed.  It only seems difficult because we mistakenly assume that there has to be one meaning that explains all the rest.