I was carefully traversing atop the smoothly-rounded
freestones blanketing the shoreline below Montauk Point Light for the second
time in my life. I felt the
accompanying, cool winds of October blowing once again, nipping at the exposed
skin of my face. These incessant,
invisible streams of transformation seemed determined to sneak inside my
collar, a chilling reminder of the seasonal change underway which was stirring
the surrounding sea, initiating the impulses of her finned inhabitants to
orchestrate their annual southern migration, and in my case, opening esteemed
doors of opportunity which surfcasters wait all season-long to pass through,
permitting a vast oceanic outlet for the faithful desire in our spirits to seek
a soulful remedy prescribed by her saltwater-stricken offerings. Standing submerged above the knees within
this hypnotically-soaking, comforting bath of restoration, I was free to let
myself go, allowing the membrane of my waders to serve me true, offering
protection against the wet and breezy elements, but allowing the absorption of
liberation to seep deep into my spirit as my expanding lungs filled afresh,
nurturing the core of my being with raw, salty-smelling air whose purging
powers of renewal were inhaled generously to circulate deep throughout my
pumping bloodstream, to fuel the very tips of my grasping fingers, to
faithfully cleanse my mind of the mundane clutter left deposited by everyday-living,
as the curative, surrounding seawater, in its rhythmic timing, rushed
forcefully around my torso to veil my lower-body in bubbling, white foam, a
welcoming seizure by the sea offering her ceremonious, churning ablution to
rinse-away the burdening accumulations of compromise inherited over time, finally
becoming relieved of such as I hungrily trekked onward, lofty and luminous in
spirit, resolute to circumnavigate the expansive, rock-strewn coast with a dear
fellow-fisher during our weekend retreat.
Wandering the littoral landscape with this friend of mine,
we found ourselves purposefully adrift, one-hundred-seventy-five-miles away
from home, united by our piscatorial passions, bonded by common principles,
inseparable afflictions rooted from a childhood exposure to the aquatic
seascape, a freedom cultivated in lifestyle choice, and a continued desire to
fully immerse ourselves within Nature’s playground, allowing our souls to seep
within her challenging, raw elements, to quench yearnings fueled by driving
dreams, striped fish, and hopes of untold discovery. Together, we would walk in
tandem, with sleek, graphite rods cradled in-hand, lure-packed surf bags
crossed over our shoulders and pressed against our lower backs, stamping our
way slowly across the stone-studded shoreline during our once-a-year,
highly-anticipated, self-declared pilgrimage to “The End.” This seed, sowed
for the first-time one year earlier on the eastern-most shore of Long Island,
was passionately declared to become our new-found tradition which we vowed to
uphold between ourselves, no matter the consequence of cost, nor the burdening
pressure of work commitments, for we knew that the intrinsic value of such an
excursion would mature over successively unfolding years and with time, increasingly
grow rich with fond memories, enduring all-time, flourishing like a towering,
three-hundred-year-old Beech reaching skyward for the sun. The expanding root system of our chronicles
would only trench deeper, perennially seeking unfound ground, growing
exhaustively to establish an extensive framework of recollections capable of
sustaining the outermost leaves of unbridled friendship extending furthest from
this tree’s branches, surviving through all of life’s seasons and trying droughts
of time. This journey of ours would physically
add a visible growth ring every year, representing another chapter written for
our story, and attempting to tally all of these concentric feats of achievement,
perhaps in curiosity of our bygone casts, would simply blur the scrutinizing
eyes of one counting.
Falling upon the ides of the tenth month, day two of our
trip, the burning inferno of the sky chose to shine brilliantly in such a way
that prolonged exposure to her warming rays resulted in the kind of late-season
sunburn you’re never quite expecting will occur. Later in the afternoon, amid a bleary-eyed
lethargic trance, this sneaky solar attribute became apparent to me, as I was
battling the urge to nap before dinner, surprised to see the flushed tone of my
forehead and cheeks in a mirror, my dry, wind-burned skin bearing the evidence after
a full-day of exposure as it was even stinging slightly to the touch. Sunlight was the least of my worries though;
I could have easily prepared myself better, applying a sunblock to scatter its
singeing shower of rays. The uncontrollable
force of Nature, the wildcard which was taunting all surfcasters on the beach
that day, challenging our efforts with a smirking grimace, was the air blowing
all around us, rambunctiously alive with unsettling enthusiasm, deflecting off
of my face and whisking throughout uncovered hair protruding from the back of
my wool hat.
Overnight, near gale-force winds invaded the region,
whipping at a sustained swiftness of thirty-miles-per-hour, and at times
gusting to thirty-five. I could do nothing
more than hope that the perturbed atmosphere would settle-down as soon as
possible, so we would have a chance
at fishing prime tides in the morning.
Unable to soothe my growing apprehension, and being lured by the driving,
dull-sounding outbursts of rushing wind howling through trees and shearing
around the motel’s walls and rooftop, I felt it necessary to poke around, as if
the night was pleading for me to step outside into the blinding darkness. I needed to confront this disturbance head-on,
this unwelcomed imposter, deciding I’d stroll towards the beach’s sand dunes
with an open bottle of seasonally-brewed beer swaying from the neck in my
loosely-held fingers.
“Scott, I’ll be back
man. I’m going to check this out,” I
announced from the patio doorway of our cozy beachfront rental. “You
got it Joey!” he yelled back to me in an elated boom. But prior to cracking the door open, our
barrier to an altogether different, harsh element, I paused before stepping
outside. Turning my sight across the
room, with my outstretched hand clenched upon the doorknob, I intentionally
froze myself motionless as a sudden, gratifying feeling had just rushed over me. In that instant, I experienced a wholesome,
overcoming wave of contentment, the type that pays a visit from time-to-time,
and when it does, the indisputable joy obtained is nothing short of a genuine
exuberance of conviction feeding the very heart of one’s reason, a fulfillment
realized from existing, breathing, and living in this moment, at this
time, in this place. Much like the brevity of a dizzying, unanticipated
lapse of déjà vu, I knew this episode too would be a fleeting,
touch-and-go glance in endurance, so I remained fixed in my thoughts, with planted
feet, in order to savor and preserve the moment of reflection, doing my best to
cherish this tranquilizing state of mind.
I could only have stood there for a few seconds I imagine,
before continuing onward, but I remained beside that doorway, grinning to
myself after venting one of those brief, exaggerated exhalations from the nose,
an acknowledgement of sorts, in this case ensuring that I absorb the
encouraging sense of happiness siphoned from this tickling pretense to laughter
it inspired to evoke, a touching, fortuitous moment captured by my opportune eyes,
the type only experienced every now and again, if you’re lucky. There was my friend, nestled comfortably within
his glory, a man at peace with himself, laying supine across the room’s low-budget
couch wearing his typical beaming smile, appearing to have completely withdrawn
from reality both physically and mentally. His shoeless-feet, retired for the evening, were
kicked-up and crossed at the ankles. It
was as if he was agreeably burrowed in a cozy lair, a hideaway retreat from the
busy demands of modern life, a seaside spa for the soul, his weekend sanctuary surrounded
by an organized, testosterone-inspired clutter that was our unpacked camping and
fishing gear placed methodically throughout the lodge. That familiar, bluish glowing light from a
muted television illuminated his eyeglasses and highlighted the features of his
face, as the music of his iPod saturated the living room with yet another
solid-sounding playlist, a sonic representation of what mattered most to him. If I had to guess, he was everywhere he
wanted and needed to be.
Seconds in time like these, where one may feel dazed in a temporary
suspended animation, so-to-speak, are instances of life’s rarer, singular moments
that make me warm-and-fuzzy on the inside.
Served is a type of nourishing cuisine for the soul where the resulting
mindset from such reflection leaves me feeling satiated, content, and
complete. “It” simply is a rushing feeling of happiness reaching deeply to the
guiding essence of one’s core, one easily distinguishable from all others in
that the joy remains anchored inside, a gift for the mind to relish, to unwrap perpetually,
over and over again. I wish the physical
experience could be frozen in time forever, but I know that’s not possible. That is why for me, realizing the
significance of its arresting gravity must be celebrated and placed carefully
away in one’s memory. They are the miniscule
moments with lasting, momentous potential which will forever stay imbedded within
us; personal souvenirs of a life lived with truthful devotion, smeared in a
decadence of richness. We beg for these
moments, which arrive with an unannounced frequency, greedily holding dear the associated
memories, for they are the priceless, defining moments which help to shift our
focus, making us feel human again, as
the euphoric head-rush lifts our cheeks higher, preserving like a color snapshot
a reminder of our individual significance in this life, rooting us on so that
we may continue to write another sentence to our masterful work-in-progress, our
epic proclamation of purpose, the climactic testament of proof cast during these
spellbinding seconds being an exclamation of assurance that the daily grind we
live is fully-worth our tireless input and effort.
Although enveloped in abduction by this intimate, high-spirited
accent of inspiration, I still needed to appease my piqued curiosity and unsettling
concerns, to witness this weather first-hand, in-the-flesh. I swung the room’s door open, introducing
myself with individual steps of confidence to the darkness outside, descending from
the second story balcony on a white-painted, wooden staircase wrapped along the
length of the building. My sneakers shifted
from side-to-side in the awaiting bed of soft, dimpled sand at ground-level. Greeting me was an unhindered, stiff wind
blowing directly off the ocean, forcing me to squint my eyes in protection. Damn, this
will not be good for fishing in the morning, I thought to myself as I
listened in a disappointing manner to the tall ocean crashing ashore. The sleeping stillness that is a typical
night was just the opposite. She was
tossing and turning uncomfortably, unable to rest peacefully, stricken with an
agitating case of insomnia, awakening a world of sounds as she stirred her
fevered fingers over the landscape. For
a moment, while standing alone and small on the beach, staring across the
blackened horizon in the direction of home, while exhaling warm breaths of
devotion into the cool, streaming flood of oncoming air, I knew that these
respirations instantly became drowned-out by the overpowering night, diluted and
reduced to a meaningless nothingness amongst the salty-smelling slipstream bleeding
from around my projecting face into the night, forever trailing into the black void
encompassing my resolute stillness. My
hopes may have been deflated, but I would like to believe that my spirit
defiantly retaliated, flying freely and naturally upon these winds, riding
aloft on outspread wings like a bird which owns the sky, reunited with the assailing
air fostering the very breaths of life responsible for nourishing my longings. I was stubbornly reminded of the fact that
when planning a fishing-trip months in advance and relying on the whimsical elements
of Nature, in this case the temperamental personality and capricious complexities
of autumnal weather, where surfcasters are forced to tread along a razor’s
edge, committing themselves to a gamble, all we can ever do is hope outright
for fair winds, a suitable surf, and if we’re lucky, the judicious timing required
to intercept the movements of migratory fish.
From where the rolling dice had settled on this night, I was again made
aware that nothing in this life is ever an entrusted guarantee. This is a fact we all know and accept, but
often neglect to look directly in the face, even when standing on the sands of
a beach in October.
Although this undesirable wind storm waned by morning,
reducing into the steady, low-teens, its damaging effects had already been
wrought on this east-coast mecca’s surf, producing unfishable conditions on the
Point’s south-side, as overhead, mushy waves rolled ashore in endless torrents
of fury, callously altering the trip’s primary purpose of pursuing the fickle whereabouts
of Morone Saxatilis. Of course, as fishermen, our hopes to engage
with stripers were still consciously forefront, but the act of marching together
along the freestone-riddled shoreline to coax fish in this lousy weather became
secondary, and in my mind, was a fleeting focus of attention. Yet, I heaved dozens of casts with all my
might in order to reach some semblance
of fishy-looking water, but all such attempts landed the same repetitious catch-of-the-day:
a crosswind-created bow in my line rivaling the size of the St. Louis Gateway
Arch, the overpowering of my heaviest lures by the tumbling, coffee-colored sea
while in retrieve, their positioning being immediately swept out of desired
strike-zones and any sense of “feel” through the mainline, pitifully being dragging
back parallel across the beach’s rip-tide strength backwash, greeted by a
waiting, despondent frown, then shaken of the clinging disappointment embedded
into each of the freely dangling hooks before being rocketed out to sea for one more shot. We had to try something I thought;
after all, this was a fishing trip.
In time, I chose to peacefully submit, as some days are just
not meant for fishing. Instead, I turned
my attention behind me, allowing all of Montauk’s grandeur to soak within me
like cascading water to a dry sponge, to quench the escalating thirst which
dehydrated my eagerness to stalk fish, withering my wishes like a forgotten,
unwatered houseplant. I would survey in
all directions with weaving, wandering eyes, absorbing the cliff-side magnificence
of her expansive vista, removing any limiting blinders of perception,
withdrawing from the tunnel-vision focus that was staring down the spine of my
rod with every directed cast, watching intently the flight of my presentation
towards the sea’s white-capped surface.
In a way, I had to recompose, reconciling with the comforting relief of realizing
that there were nearly countless avenues to venture on this vacation. Yes, we come here to fish, but we come here to fish because it is the famous stage, the
Grand Ole Opry of her kind, the pristine backdrop to an undeveloped getaway
where her storied, unparalleled past, robust in a history living ripe to this
day, marking the wading-soul’s testament to and birthplace of revelation, a
coveted destination of fishing apostles who hail from afar to christen
themselves in her sweeping, divine waters.
The legendary, glowing aura of reputation is what suggests casting a
shadow on these stony beaches much more substantial and symbolic than just any
other day of leaving footprints behind in the sand somewhere else, those only
to be washed away in a splashing surf, your presence forever erased with a
receding tide. The mighty breathes of
air inhaled here remain a part of you, invigorating and clenching to your spirit,
pervading the soul in a fashion which makes you rest impatiently to be fed
again.
Impassioned feelings as these, stricken to the wayfaring
surfcaster’s afflictions of desire, penetrate deeply to the fish-seeking fiber
of one’s being like an embedded harpoon of purposeful meaning, boldly striking
the inspired of heart, and vibrating true with reason for those possessed with
the crazed idolizations for a striped fish, for those who have tasted the salty
water of the Atlantic upon their lips as it dripped from their wave-soaked
face, having stood wide-eyed in the surf, studying oncoming sets of waves,
cautiously back-pedaling in a shifting, sinking sand in order to dodge another
merciless drenching. Dare her as you
might, but this ocean, raw in spirit, bows neither to man nor any obstacle in
her path. On the rocky shorelines of
this Northeast surfcasting capital, you may only participate in your efforts,
donating your passion, for she continuously roars forward in an unstoppable,
foaming fury.
These ingrained, tenacious impulses of the surfcaster vie to
manifest larger than life, stemming from an undeniable truth: that a
healthy-spirited man requires to be challenged in a manner where he may prove
his worthiness within a testing environment.
So exists this primal fire burning from deep within, fueling a hunger
for such adventure, thereby requiring a chosen outlet to stoke this inferno of
passion, emitting fiery embers in an appetite of excitement. To squelch these desires is to suppress man
entirely, and is as dangerous as caging a wild lion, for an inevitable and
agonizing death of spirit threatens to follow as the extinguishment of this
life-force, once seen dancing fiercely in their eyes, will gouge both beasts of
their visceral howls, the two slowly becoming eviscerated of essential substance
and emasculated of a once unrivaled prowess.
Surf fishing these shores has always offered reason for the casting man
to feel challenged, for the Fresnel lens beaming from inside his far-seeing eye
to shine as wide and brightly as the towering beacon standing resolute over his
brave shoulders, this brown and white-banded, century-old sentinel guarding the
shoreline which he immerges, where he is wrought with determination to launch
that ever-meaningful, sailing plastic-prayer over the ocean, to taunt his heart
with a promise of hope, to feed the flaming desire which draws him to return
united under the ancient sea surrounding her great, casting shadow looming from
the high precipice behind.
Laying my rod aside to instead concentrate efforts with my
mind, focusing my sight to see more clearly, with a more discerning and
judgmental eye, was nothing new to me, but it became the necessary mandate as a
fisherman who was offered no other choice on this weather-dominated day. Today, the fish would win. Somewhere out in the ocean below these
bitter, relentlessly churning waves they were gliding in the tidal conveyor of
currents before me. For them, it was
just another day in their underwater kingdom, a day I would have no
participation of trespassing. I switched
gears, instead using the simple, beautiful outlets surrounding me in nearly
every direction imaginable to fall exposed to my ever-observant desire in
adding experience of various dimension to my existence, basking in a satisfaction
of enrichment when uncovering new unknowns in new lands. There is always
far more to experience than what haphazardly enters the eye as obvious
perception, this cliff-side destination at the edge of the sea being no
different. Anyone could see the profoundness
of style steeped within her pure, natural complexion, a fulfillment that is
physical to the senses. This much is
easy to determine and admire. One must
simply find themselves lost in her distracting, panoramic visualizations
stretching uninhibited for miles and miles in every direction. Under the surface however, lies another world
to recognize and connect with. To fully-seize
the essence of her character, to make the claim that you have seen Montauk, one must be willing pry harder,
with a deep conviction for discovery of the inimitable peace-of-mind which is laid
bare by such an encounter. Her allure is
much like the mystique of a stunningly attractive woman, instantly teasing the
eyes with an intensely desirous, riveting seduction. She lies in wait with unseen curves to be experienced,
for one to move closer to, as there is unspoken encouragement for one to commit
to deepest memory her temptations discovered in touch and taste, that which are
unlike any other you’ve embraced. She is
affectionately remembered as “the one.” Many have compared, but none have satisfied
to the extent of this union. This I
knew, as I would find means to embody and continue to embark upon yet another
one of my oft philosophically-minded quests, trials in further understanding the
precious significance of my place in time, provoking to unveil personal
insights translated from an existence molded in the artisanal hands of Nature’s
serenity. I was to feed this hunger and savor
with my senses her mysterious and uncommon appeal in order to relish in reflections
of enjoyment, utilizing the gift of inspired introspection on this second day
of respite.
I had split away from Scott for some time now, giving him
the precious time spent here on the meandering shoreline to bond with his
teenage son, man-to-man, one-on-one, with fishing rods in-hand. Both had fallen out of my view at this point
as they headed west along the winding coast of the north-side to cast in calmer
surf. I knew it was important for the
time they now had between themselves to be cherished as it should be; adrift in
one another’s company. The dream of chasing-down
fish was an illusion of sorts. Whether or
not they knew outright, it was my opinion, as I watched their outlined bodies
trek onward, decreasing in size before fading completely out of sight, that both
had just caught for themselves what we fishermen refer to as “personal bests.” They were walking side-by-side on the idyllic
shores of Montauk, in a mystic world away from home, sharing the beloved gift of
alliance between father and son, that which can be experienced with no one
else, making it altogether priceless.
The indelible moments they would create beside one another could never
be valued by any means possible, only their own afflicted hearts and minds
would be able to determine the significance of such a dear, incalculable treasure. As I saw it, another brick would be laid atop
the many others already set to their soaring foundation of memories being built
together, strengthening another episode to reflect upon in the distant future,
to recount the peculiar occurrences of a rich story forged as father and son, to
glow in shared smiles rooted from this experience, and chuckle in the fondness
of an illustrious past painted with beautiful colors of combination. Left to my imagination once more, I thought how
special it would be, against the odds of weather we faced, if unknown to me,
one of their rods was bent over in a magnificent arch, as the breathtaking
stripes of a linesider were tugging fiercely in a splashing, swirling battle, their
solitary afternoon in concert now erupting with the elation of total surprise, the
experience shared together to forever become branded in their astonished memories
set atop the freestone shoreline with lapping saltwater waves cheering at their
feet.
Secluded with my thoughts, I continued in the direction of
the lighthouse. The sheet of rounded-rocks
clacked and clunked against one another, readjusting as they settled or moved entirely
under my digging footsteps. These stones
were scattered by the hundreds of thousands about the beach, in some areas more
prominently and densely-packed than others amassed closely nearby, covering the
shoreline as if it were a quarry of perfectly-smoothened, spherical
rubble. Assembled in collusion, their blanketed
presence creates a distinct ambiance adorning the resolute, unmistakable facade
to the endmost tip of Long Island, adding earthy character to the surroundings,
a visible distinction like that of a man wearing the days-old stubble of an
unshaven beard on his face. Defining the
limits as to where this protruding coastline terminates and submits to the sea
waits a naturally-sculpted, unmistakable lamination of individuality. Over centuries of time, subject by the incessant
forces of flooding, tidal water, these stones have become physically tumbled,
clustered together in segregated aggregations, piled as temporary neighbors in
large patches of similar-sized pairings, as seasonal storms rearrange the
placements of this New England-esque artistry, forming the exposed, uppermost layer
viewable to the scanning eyes, seated amongst the beach’s mixed composition of
sand and gravel.
I wondered for how many years, or decades even, they have lain
in the general area, exposed from the eroding cliff-side moraine and now burrowed
within their “home” atop the seemingly infinite bed of sand where they rest. I wondered for how many centuries it must
have taken to become smoothened by the painstakingly slow processes of erosion,
the result of tumbling through a sandy, churning surf, how enjoyable and novel it
is to stroll slowly with my facing scanning downward, observing the various characteristics
of the rocks below my creeping feet, vigilant to spot a uniquely colored,
shaped, or patterned stone amongst the blinding multitudes, and curiously reaching
down to pick one up which catches my eye and give it a look-over in my shuffling
hand, these weighty, glacial artifacts of the Earth’s volcanic adolescence
having the skin-soothing qualities like that of superfine, six-hundred-grit
sandpaper to wood. I thought about the countless
hordes of fisherman who have danced upon this mosaic of rocks since the dawn of
surfcasting began, in search of the same indulgences as I was, how many of
these souls, in their roaming, may have been found in their massaging thoughts as I was, how many fanning caudal
fins of trophy-sized, leg-length stripers were dragged upon their surfaces by
proud fishermen, grazing them in a brushing sound, leaving behind a fading trail
of water and slime, or how many cherished, bighearted conversations between fellow
fishermen they were privy to eavesdrop during untold hours of the night and
day, punctuated by tall, nostalgic tales of bygone tails.
Later that afternoon, feeling fatigued in my stray travels, I
crossed paths with an impressive spectacle high-and-dry up the slope of the
beach, stranded like a beached porpoise was a refined creation wrought from a prolonged,
punishing exposure to the corrosive, combined efforts of saltwater and
sunlight. It was a beautiful, blonde-colored,
thirty-foot or more section of timber, a massive tree trunk fully sun-bleached,
claimed and reconditioned by the sea, enigmatically adrift for an indeterminate
duration of time, held captive, governed by the kinetic forces of winds and
tides before washing aground on the north-eastern shore of the Point, a layover
I imagined, not that it may find roots, for the ocean will one day recall her
as flotsam again. I find enjoyment in
stumbling upon interestingly shaped or weathered pieces of driftwood. Each is a relic from the sea, a piece of art
crafted by Nature, and much like an individual, is unique in appearance with a
telling history of origination. This
polished, solidified mass of cellulose and lignin was one of the largest,
note-worthy masterpieces in my recent memory.
It would have easily required more than ten men to move, so thus, served
a perfect resting place as it was an ideal height off the sand to sit comfortably
upon, allowing me to pause from my marching of the shore, as I slumped my back
and crossed both elbows over my straddled legs to relax, taking in cool breathes
as my eyes scanned the offshore waters, making out the faint, distant profile
of western Block Island.
I couldn’t help but notice, perched atop this dense, rounded
seating of mine, an amusing-looking stack of eight flattened stones piled-together
into a pyramid-shaped tower. The largest
stone, over a foot in length, served as the base. The stones resting upon those supporting them
were all successively smaller in dimension, with the whole arrangement crowned
by a tactfully-placed rock which was small enough to fit within a cupped
hand. I imagined it to be the construct
of creative-thinking visitors to the park, fellow wanderers of this oceanfront
refuge. Someone found a sense of satisfaction
in scouring with their eyes the surrounding field of thousands of choices at
our feet for appropriately-sized candidates, envisioning which rock would be
suitable for support of the next, building this harmonious, far-east-looking
design of delicately-positioned rocks, in a way leaving a thumbprint of their determined
goal to establish a sense of balance, if not within themselves, then vicariously
for others to recognize through reflection of their standing handiwork, this
visually simplistic, yet expressive design petitioning for a degree of attention
in some way or another.
I would be the first to acknowledge and agree that there is
nothing profound over spotting a neatly-piled assembly of stones. Anyone would see them for what they are;
simply a cold stack of weathered rocks, chosen for some odd reason from a sea
of nearly identical brethren lying scattered along the beach. But as with many things in life, we often
search with abandon for a self-fulfilling understanding, find ourselves pondering
at length for deep-seated meanings, wishing to attribute relevance and
satisfaction of sorts from the pinning focus of our intrigues. I had no reason
or desire to pry deeper, to form
abstract conceptualizations of what was positioned beside me that day on the shared
seat of driftwood. I had offered nothing
more than a brief, exchanging glance with this inanimate companion. I simply appreciated it for what it was, this
primitive introduction and token of human-touch within a naturally-pristine environment,
and continued onward with my day. So I
thought.
It was only by chance, two-years later, as my engaged eyes intently
skimmed left-to-right over a blackened sea of ink-struck letters, waves of
words and sentences, as I quietly submitted from reality, allowing these
flowing phrases to flood my mind with lucid and fanciful scenes conjured by my
engrossed and esteemed disposition, fueled by the carefully-selected words of
an artist painting visual imagery for his reader, a storyteller holding an
audience. I was taken away by the pages
of a good book, when at random, I crossed the five-letter word “cairn.”
I did not know its meaning outright, but on a remotely small scale, it
was as if an epiphany had befallen my state of mind, something had just clicked.
On that day, I learned what a stacked structure of rocks, identical to
the type I saw, was actually known as. I
found the thought encouraging that my silent seaside friend had a name, a
proper designation, a word which could be sifted from any dictionary worth its
salt, a concept worthy of being
recognized. I found out that freshwater
fishermen had been building them atop the dry backs of larger rocks within
streams and rivers for decades. They
were used as waypoints, serving to instruct anglers who happen upon them that the
stretch of water it was constructed near had just been fished. The angler was to then knock it over, hike
upstream to fresh, unfished water above the angler who courteously set it, and
then build a cairn there so other
fishermen were made aware of his
wading and disturbing of the riverbed.
Tilted-back comfortably in my chair, I was immediately transported back
in time to the October afternoon I spent sitting alone in the blustery wind on
the faraway shore of a surfcaster’s paradise.
In that gratifying moment of elucidation, a large, curling
overhead wave of thoughts encouraged me to drift away on a raft of associated
memories, my mind afloat on an unstoppable, new-moon-strength flooding tide, rushing
up a familiar-looking coast of recollections.
Held merciless in these transporting currents of time, I was not to fear,
for I knew the prudence of the water’s wisdom would eventually wash me ashore
so I may relive my saga on terra firma, the reminisced experiences marinated in
the intuition of a seasoned perspective, granting me the ability to fish with the
irresistible lure of hindsight cast into the depths of my past. With a measuring tape laid to the flopping
liveliness of this keeper-sized memory, I was able to realize the magnitude of
simplicity and excess of beauty measured from this encounter.
What I failed to recognize during my sedentary period of solitude
on the beach, was that the composition of the delicately-standing and
gracefully-stabilized stone cairn that I sat beside begged me to acknowledge
and bear in mind that this life we live is quite similar in nature, in that it too is fragile to disrupting touch, that
it could just as well be described as a steady balancing act held under
constant pressures placed upon us, testing our resolve to remain upright. How simple and straightforward this concept
alluded, I thought. What is more important
than for each of us accept our own precepts for defining our everyday balancing
points, the fulcrums that act as inflection marks in maintaining
inner-harmonies, that we may find crucial counterbalance deriving from the collective
wholeness that makes us one, for a guiding strength to carry all the pressing
weight atop our shoulders, so that we may continue to stand tall and straight, resilient
amongst all of life’s daily challenges, and ultimately, if we’re ever so lucky,
thus serve as a role model that others may admire, encouraging those to walk steadfast
with courage, to bravely leave footprints imprinted along a path less-followed,
where the limitless varieties and nuances of life’s bountiful offerings will surely
entice a penetrating smile from their rewarded hearts. This inanimate reminder that life, in its dynamic,
beautiful potential requires tender hands of care, a nurturing touch, so that
it may mature to become something better and larger, shines brilliantly like
high-noon summer sunlight reflecting from a polished mirror in all the moments
we find unique or inspirational, and it is fact
that such glory is always extant in
the foreground of life, awaiting for us to discover with watchful, receptive
eyes, to introduce itself, if not for the first time, then as a binding reunion
of faith.
Unbeknownst to me at the time, that was the last visit to
Montauk I would ever have the pleasure of making with Scott. Awash in thought during my stretch of rest on
the deserted driftwood, I was physically
pausing under the lighthouse to break from the hopelessly repetitive actions of
attempting to hook an elusive striped species of fish under unfavorable circumstances
prompted by weather. Now, I am spiritually pausing to reflect upon the hopeful
and enduring memories gained since day-one, the initial crossing of our paths,
that serendipitous encounter where unexpectedly lying unseen around the next
corner of discovery, living a storied existence altogether unknown to me, was a
charismatic man exuding an entirely energetic, one-of-a-kind, show-stopping personality
offering an outstretched gift in the form of a bear-paw-sized handshake, a
magnetic introduction forged with ingredients of parallel interests capable of
mocking the wearing hands of time, a starting pistol firing into the air
proclaiming the inauguration of a friendship set to begin a step-by-step marathon
over distances yet uncharted, one of which led me to the pounding shores of
Montauk where I sat alone, face-to-face with the sea, basking within a
reeled-in tranquility beached for me to feast on an autumn afternoon. This reflection, where I reminisced in our many
rooted connections, awarded me with the awareness of a cow striper-sized moment
of complacency which would have easily bottomed-out any Boga-Grip due to its hefty history, these memories a personal exhibition
of grimacing pride held out in suspension by straining arm muscles for all to
see from one of those fish-scale contrivances donned at the waist, secured with
a coiled, telephone-cord-like lanyard by many a wetsuit-clad super-surfcaster
of today. Hey, look at the size of THIS friendship! I could say.
These thoughts led me to further appreciate that the best any
of us may ever accede to aspire is to live each precious second after
successive second in the present,
embracing the precepts of an unalterable pact which we rightfully adhere so as to
continually define ourselves, recognizing this element to be the prized gift we
covet and strive to translate into a fulfilling life, those unequivocal sensations
latched onto and embedded into the deepest, inner-most fibers of our spirit which
are repeatedly taken for granted with each fresh breath of air we inhale and then
exchange for an inexhaustible demand pleading for permanence following each
exhalation. Much like fishing an
overnight session alongside a close friend on a desolate stretch of sand whose
very attendance acts as a comforting accompaniment throughout the unnerving raven-colored
veil of night, this introspective and idealistic attitude is more easily
appreciated when in the presence of someone who naturally beams with a vigor
for life like that of a radiating beacon capable of piercing through the
darkest of dark nights, their personality being an unmistakable, coruscating column
of energy blanketing one with the light of camaraderie which emits dauntless
rays of confidence for miles upon miles.
This very attribute was a special distinction, a refined trait, which Scott
was blessed to send forth and share with the world. Being the highly capable, over-the-top,
people-person that he was, I could see that he undoubtedly impregnated his soul
with the interactions birthed as a result of spreading the richness of such a unique
gift with others, his far-reaching and illuminating light of life, even if only
during a brief, passing exchange with a stranger, bundled and presented as a
nod and sealed-lip smile, the naturally spontaneous interaction adding one more
rare drop of kindness to a deprived world.
In an analogous fashion, being the fishermen that we were, I
witnessed the scope of this compassionate attitude of his extending to the very
quarry we chased, as he crouched down low to offer carefully cradled hands of
support to the white underbelly of a fish being set for release in the shallow,
foamy water of the surf rushing over his feet, this gratifying act being the
quintessential paragon of benevolence between dissimilar kinds, as the
slippery, fanning caudal fin glided freely through his relaxed, wet hands, swaying
slowly and finally thrusting forward in one strong sweep as the fish
disappeared from sight back into the reclaiming water, returning again to the
only home it ever knew. It was in that
brief, but altogether satisfying moment where Scott too released himself into the salutary, salty sea, his spirit
being set-free by an overwhelming sense of accomplishment as a fisherman, an
outdoorsman, a man who understood what it meant to become “one” with the delicate nature of the Natural world around us.
Scott may be physically removed from us, and the occasional echoing
of his voice sounding in our heads now only being a sonorous ghost of reality, but
cast afar over multitudes of widely unrelated locales, embodied in the daily
goings-on of others whose lives he influenced and incidentally unified as the common
denominator, are each of our unique memories cast in permanence, breathing with
a life which cannot be stripped from our conscious, living testaments stamped
upon our spirits which serve to encourage that we walk this ongoing odyssey of
ours bellowing an intangible proclamation, an unshakable tribute garnered by
virtue of the fortification of a ripened respect honored from acquiring his
friendship, and forever hold dear an interwoven love found threaded within our
hearts. A cruel reality, merciless in a
scorned audacity, prematurely robbed this man from a beloved wife and son,
spirited family, a loyal legion of friends, and the countless other souls his
own life made contact with, but from this black season of loss, those fortunate
are the ones who have gained from his kindhearted contributions to simple,
everyday existence on this earth, those who were warmed by the joy he exuded and
humble words of support he suggested, reciprocating these actions in their own
daily lives as a result of his deserving influence, wearing such personal appreciations
with a pride made outwardly clear, exhibited with a natural comfort like one in
a favorite, worn-in cotton shirt, eager to show-off their personal taste.
Like a mighty fish suddenly hooked on the end of one’s line,
after countless hours of patiently stalking and vigilantly searching, the
distinct friendship from an exemplary man suddenly erupts into existence, dropped
from the clear blue sky one day, but unfortunately, this miraculous pairing of
fate, this legendary catch of a lifetime, jolting our spirit with a surging rush
of adrenaline and renewed freshness, an acute sensation of wholeness manifesting
in a feverish fanaticism for this cause at-hand, escapes our grasping touch in
a heart-wrenching loss without any rational understanding or warning, much like
the sudden snapping-off of this angler’s mainline, his only connection to an
unrivaled or misunderstood freedom of contentment found nowhere else in the
framework of his life. The stabbing loss
unearths an abysmal void impossible to refill.
You know that was the chance
of a lifetime and you will never engage with the likes of that type of
remarkable connection again. You had
your chance, you were prepared, you did your best to fight the good fight, but
you are also made aware that when choosing to cast forth in participation,
standing face-to-face between the autonomous, almighty judgments of the natural
world around us, you learn that life is far from yours to fully control. This gift you may be presented, whether it be
a mighty fish or a magnificent friendship, is just that, a gift, and it must always be thought of and treated respectfully in
that manner. Weighing heavily in the
misfortune of a defeated set-back, this seminal moment we all long for during our
continued trials and accumulated lessons learned in life, where we seek to
great ends to discover the desirous sources inspiring our wandering, persistent
thoughts, one realizes that the taste of this dream was their own for a
glorious, but altogether brief, glimpse of time. It leads one to recognize that little can be greater
appreciated than having an unconditional understanding of friendship between
another person.
Marching along the freestone-peppered shoreline, eager to
fish, but more than content to chat, share laughs, and lackadaisically wear the
weekend through, was absolutely the greatest catch of all. On these excursions, it always made me happy to know that he was happy, to partake as an
accepting, generous friend and watch him bask in the flood of sunlight,
absorbing the serene features of land and sea into his receptive eyes,
passionately feeding his soul during a relatively simple, but vitally
significant weekend vacation within earshot of home. We didn’t have to jet-set. There was no reason for a lavish endeavor.
That was the whole point. I never asked him, but I wouldn’t be
surprised to learn if in his own heart, it was he who claimed to reeled-in the greatest catch, taking pride and
teeming with satisfaction in knowing that my
rousing experiences on the faraway shores of this great escape were fundamental
to ensuring his own sense of personal fulfillment. I KNEW
you would get a kick out of this place Joey!
Times like these reminded of my youthful
years when I paused to comprehend the significance of a framed picture that my
mother had hanging from a wall in her house.
It read something to the effect of “the
best kind of friend is the kind you can sit on a porch with, never say a word,
then walk away feeling like it was the best conversation that you ever had.” In this case, finding contentment while listening
to the soft-spoken whispers offered by this land’s voice, her charming serenade
like that of a siren, fully-grasping our soul’s attention and acknowledged as
such in a silence, but made transparent through the tight-lipped, meditative,
dreamy-looking smiles worn on our faces.
Scott behaved as an
accomplished tour guide of sorts, spiritedly narrating any degree of knowledge he could draw to further
substantiate the streaming sights, ensuring that all dots were connected,
naturally exuding a contagious exuberance of enthusiasm which I watched beaming
from his widened-eyes and chuckling, plastered grin each time he turned his
head towards mine, as he was familiar with the in-roads, the nooks and crannies
of the land, ensuring the limited time we were dealt was utilized most
effectively, that a solid sense of achievement would be felt before hitting the
pillow each night, knowing that we turned-over the most remote corners to
exploration. It wasn’t uncommon to
cruise along Route 27 from the elevated comfort of his F-150 pick-up truck,
with our grill-mounted surf rods swaying in the oncoming rush of air as we
drove to survey the landscape, or stroll the storefront sidewalks downtown, resisting
temptations to purchase tourist-trap T-shirts, seeking-out “MTK”
bumper-stickers as our rite-of-passage keepsakes, veritable vehicular passport
book stamps proclaiming to fishermen that “yeah,
we’ve been there,” browsing the selection of lures at Paulie’s Tackle or Star
Island Yacht Club, tickling fishermen for gossip, or standing in refreshing awe
atop the elevated seaside bluffs and eroding hoodoo spires perched beside the
ocean at Camp Hero, or visiting the Art Barge in Amagansett, or pulling-up to
Espo’s, a roadside surf-shop shanty in hopes of purchasing a cool-looking shirt
unavailable anywhere else back home, or combing inside the town’s various art
consignment shops, one of which his wife’s photography was commissioned, or
stepping into a music store packed to the gills with hanging guitars, cradling
these expensive acoustics to make them sing brightly. All of these “little” moments were the
individual grains of sand, timepieces of experience valued dear by ourselves,
which when all piled together formed the wide beach of memories that was ours
for making footprints in.
To fish, to understand how during one pivotal moment, while leaning
backwards in a crashing surf around my feet, clenching with both hands onto a
heavily arching graphite rod, twisting my head sideways to look for that beaming
eruption of joy emanating from a friend’s face, an ignited reflection of his
blazing spirit suddenly awakened in witnessing my joy, is his overwhelming smile transcending all demanding
distractions of daily-life, where this ensuing confluence on the sand, a
predestined consequence of calculated reasons I did not consciously make myself
aware of, endless exertions only having existed to lead us both to this exact
moment in time for this piscatorial gift of reward, an instant exhilaration
surging throughout my body, for my soul to float buoyantly on a surrounding sea
of bliss, to breathe-in deeply the encompassing magnitude of standing peacefully
in this very spot, inhaling the
sinking and resultantly accepting understanding that this will never occur
anywhere else anytime ever again along this expansive shoreline. In actuality, I had just conceived a special
moment in time, ordained for the precious peculiarities of comprehension by the
right-minded, a subjective sample of reality recognized only by those in-tune
with life’s greater meanings
discovered in an atavistic manner at the hands of Nature. As fate had it, the entirety of our
friendship had culminated for both of us to live this striking, memorable experience
with a flopping fish on a faraway land at only an arms-length apart. Success
was ours. This date is now
permanently ingrained upon my mind, stored and affectionately labeled as “that day” before the orange and
bloodshot-colored sky exploding in flaming hues over the beach, a morning I
will never soon forget, inviting to dare an episode of total-recall, this
clear-cut instance of inspirational illustration memorialized as a mental freeze-frame
image paused selectively from a fast-forwarded time-lapse-like video recording for
me to relive over and over again in my musing mind.
I suppose that similar to the oceanic tides, with every
hopeful, flooding beginning comes every unavoidable, ebbing end. As a surfcaster, each knows to mentally
prepare himself, for at some point in time he must begrudgingly fire his last
cast. There are days when he may be more
than willing to do so, ready to retreat from foul weather to the comfort of warmth
and dryness indoors or on rarer occasions agreeably forfeiting after partaking
in the insane frenzy of an epic session in the surf, shedding confidence in his
retiring wake, yet stunned in disbelief that his fortune was as rewarding. There is no denying that it just feels good when all of the amassed
jigsaw puzzle pieces align snugly, fitting together perfectly. Either way, there exists constantly a greater
encouragement, for so long as the sun will rise the following day, there is
always a hopeful promise for prosperity next
time. And for one to grow wise
enough to know that it is not always fish we are after, that to simply catch Nature in her endless forms,
expressions, and colors, to share these larger-than-life moments in the company
of a dear fellow-fisher, is far greater than any curving of the rod one may
ever experience. In this sense, I can readily
admit that fortune befell me while walking the shores of Montauk alongside
Scott, that while scanning the breathtaking vistas, studying the land and
seascape, allowing the grandeur of this theater to saturate my awareness, that
I had limited-out on my catch before slinging my very-first cast from her
beaches. I was with Scott, the greatest
find a friend could have ever hoped to land in his lifetime. On these shores, in this setting, we simply
understood in our hearts the unspoken truths weaved into her nature, the
tightly-woven stitches that were her threads keeping the seams of our spirits
bound as one, justifying the implications of being away together on a weekend
withdrawal to fish her waters. He knew
that I just got it. From his perspective, like that of a giddy
person excitedly offering a wrapped present to a friend, impatiently oozing in
anticipation for it to be opened for the surprise it will surely generate, I’m
sure this must have been fulfilling for him to recognize, as I unfurled the
layered folds of this storied land, my conducts liberated with gifts of
contentment.
How could I have ever
prepared to make my last cast beside Scott?
Even if life could have given me that warning, I wouldn’t be ready. Imagine being told this is the last sunrise over the ocean you will ever witness. Tomorrow
there will be no such thing to befall your awaiting eyes. The sky
will not even appear overcast, it will remain dark as night. You will never feel its penetrating rays of
light warming your face again. There
is no way to prepare for a scenario like that!
No one can possibly be prepared for this crushing unthinkable. But with that, I awoke one morning completely
unaware that an insidious encroachment was lurking dangerously close to my
side. I was the fisherman wading a false-dawn
shoreline, camouflaged from sight within the surrounding darkness, eager for
the awakening of a hopeful, new day and its many unknown, but promised entrustment
of possibilities, my fully-loaded rod whipping a lure out over the sea, however
this second-nature casualness becoming instantly interrupted as there was an unmistakable,
fatal failure attracting all of my attention with a brief, unwanted tug of
resistance and an accompanying, dreadful snapping-sound of separation as it
fouled around the rod tip, this resulting cast robbing me of a favorite partner
as I painfully and hopelessly watched it disappear out of sight, this prized
possession becoming permanently disconnected from my commitment faster than I
could blink. And just like that, it’s gone.
What I took for granted, what I came to know so well with the many
acquired seasons, and respected as a proven go-to resource time-after-time,
wasn’t mine to reach-out to any longer.
A sudden, sinking feeling left me with feelings of distress and emptiness,
a set-back I was not expecting or ready for, a castaway I wish I was better
prepared to accept the consequences of, for I would have exercised more care
and vigilance with the simple nature of this delicate relationship. I would have doubled-checked my knots for
freshness and strength, and made sure I left no frays on my leader, exposing
myself to known weaknesses in connectivity where there should only be the
clarity of solid durability. In effect, I
stood alone, severed in a sunken quiescence, waiting for the light of a brilliant
sunrise that would never rise to greet me.
Where a shadow was once cast, a comfort-zone which shaded me
with the warm cover of friendship, an insulating umbrella of rarity which was
easily, and more so regrettably at times, taken for granted, is now forever
removed from us in this life, exposing me to an unfamiliar feeling of absence I
was once shielded from. For me, to
remain hopeful for the promises of the next rising of the tide, and all
bounties that it may flood the shores of life with, for the promises bestowed
with each new day, I remain steadfast with faith, recalling the unassuming, but
uplifting words of Sir Isaac Newton, who prudently gave credit to the many
existing achievements set before his time which in turn, nurtured his own principles
to springboard atop of, thus allowing himself to soar to heights never
imaginable, stating famously “If I have seen further it is by standing on the shoulders of giants.”
Two-years later, as my bittersweet trip to The End with Scott is relived to no end in my mind, I realize that
if I too have seen further, it was by
standing in unison, shoulder-to-shoulder as a humbled friend, an apprentice to
experience, sheltered beside an admirable man who cast a giant shadow of
greatness.
When I
asked Scott if he knew whether or not there was any associated meaning to these
stacked rocks, he told me “I dunno. It’s something you see up here in the New
England area.” Little did I know how
much I would build upon this previous discovery.
Scott
proudly holds a schoolie-Striper caught during a dawn blitz on the last day of
our first saunter together in Montauk.
The morning’s catch of Bass proved to be the sweet icing smothering an
indulgent treat of a trip.
The blitzing allure of Montauk Point, the
Surfcasting Capital of the World, depicted with Photoshop. I can never thank Scott enough for
introducing me to this destination. I
will never consider it the same without him, either. My reassuring hope is that he smiles down
upon me, proud that he offered the gentle push of encouragement to explore new
lands, to live boldly in adventurous excitement, to find the sights unseen we
will hold dear to our hearts.
Two Scotts, father and son, aglow with
midnight smiles on Montauk’s north-side.
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