The Common Loaf bakery in Tofino smelled of coffee, cinnamon, and melted cheese. Though pleasant, the aroma gave me no map. It could have been a strip mall in a Michigan suburb. A truck in Ontario. For a moment I was everywhere and nowhere, until with a few words my old friend Colin Rulooff returned me to our Canadian west coast.
鈥淭hese guys at the shop claim the swell is five feet,鈥 he said. 鈥Pffft. I鈥檒l have to see it to believe it.鈥
The final clink of his knife and fork suggested he鈥檇 made short work of his sticky bun. I abandoned my utensils and dug in. We were going surfing. Shred was the verb of the day. I just hoped it wouldn鈥檛 apply to me personally. Though fit and active, we鈥檙e primarily just a couple of eggheaded dads.
鈥淵ou want another?鈥 he asked. 鈥淕otta load up on carbs.鈥
鈥淣aw, I鈥檓 good.鈥
鈥淐ome again?鈥
His chair scraped left. I assumed he was looking for my face.
鈥淣o, I鈥檓 OK,鈥 I said, more loudly and with exaggerated enunciation.
The daffy notion that Colin, who is deaf, would someday teach me how to surf has been in the works for a long time. He first suggested this trip to the Pacific side of Vancouver Island 16 years ago, when we met in a logic course at Simon Fraser University, just outside Vancouver. Back then, Colin鈥檚 hearing clocks in at about 20 percent functionality in the right ear and 50 percent in the left. Today the weaker side is blotto, and the good side clings to 40 percent. If your lips evade his eyes, you鈥檙e either off the radar or spouting gibberish. I hadn鈥檛 seen much of him since graduation, so the difference was striking. Then again, I haven鈥檛 seen much in the past decade, so I鈥檓 sure my difference was tricking, too.
鈥淲hat can you see in here,鈥 he asked. 鈥淟ike can you see me at all?鈥
I turned to the sound of rain on the bakery window. 国产吃瓜黑料 was the village, its stands of old-growth cedar like a fence against the Pacific. Wilderness surfing, they call it. World-class waves, they say. A jade-colored canopy and gunmetal skies. But what did I know? Fifty-five degrees was all my skin said, and wet, wet, wet.
鈥淲ell, if my eyes were this window,鈥 I explained, 鈥測ou鈥檇 have to paint the left pane with beef gravy and the right with Vaseline. That鈥檚 about all I get now. Some shadows come through, but not much.鈥
It鈥檚 a well-rehearsed image, one I鈥檝e cultivated over the years for the daily grilling from strangers about what I can or can鈥檛 see. Really, though, the most accurate description is that I鈥檓 blind.
鈥淵ou ready? Let鈥檚 get you in a wetsuit,鈥 Colin chirped. 鈥淚t鈥檚 going to be awesome.鈥
I stoop up, unfolded my cane, and tripped over a chair. At least on the waves, or pinned below them, I鈥檇 have little in the way other than myself. My beginner鈥檚 anxiety crested.
鈥淵ou鈥檙e going to watch out for me in the water, right?鈥 I said.
Colin opened the door and guided me outside into a gorgeous smear.
鈥淗耻丑?鈥 he said. 鈥淐ome again?鈥
TAKING TO THE FREEZING swell with a deaf guy was not a suicide attempt. In fact, I鈥檓 fairly accustomed to the gimpy life. My sight deteriorated over the course of 20 years, as if my eyes slowly bored themselves to death,, from a genetic misfire called retinitis pigmentosa. It鈥檚 painless, it鈥檚 irreversible, and it鈥檚 been a while. New drivers have fender benders; I was the teenager who impaled his mom鈥檚 car on a boulder. Clumsiness couldn鈥檛 explain it. I complained about the fog. There wasn鈥檛 any. When a doctor finally shined a light into my eyes, it didn鈥檛 reflect back. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e night blind,鈥 he said. It was my 18th birthday. Twenty years later, I cannot remember my face. I haven鈥檛 seen it since 1997 or so.
But blindness, I find, isn鈥檛 much of an enemy. You plot about town, occasionally you piss between urinals, and you carry on. No big whoop. Embarrassment? Now that can dog the blind something awful. What鈥檚 more, white canes and Braille can鈥檛 cure the most dangerous side effect of my condition: the terminal malaise of keeping safe. Blindness is so bloody boring.
My surfing experiment was, in fact, just one of many extreme situations I鈥檝e put myself in lately. The big picture, the big-kahuna project, is a book called . Through it, I want to learn how to enjoy this body, the one I鈥檝e been left with after sight, by seeking out unique and obscure sensations around the world. Call it an education. What is the Eiffel Tower of touch? Take me to the iconic stink of a corpse flower or a durian orchard. Too bad I鈥檒l never see the Great Sphinx, but I鈥檝e heard a symphony of several hundred pissed-off Texas rattlesnakes and butchered a cow in a Tuscan village. They don鈥檛 make postcards for that.
For this adventure, I tapped the only surfer I knew. That surfer happened to be deaf. Not to worry. We鈥檇 figure out a system. I used to parrot Colin what our logic professor was saying while he copied notes from the blackboard for me. It sort of worked, too, until we were accused of plagiarism, having made identically strange errors in our assignments.
Traveling blind has an ironic backhand. The problem begins at home. I know the minutiae of the few square blocks in Vancouver where I live. I can snatch a number from the hook at my local deli without assistance, though you鈥檇 have to tell me what it says, or bump ahead in line. Detailed spatial memory makes my neighborhood seem immense. But to travel, to leave my rich mental map of those four blocks, actually disappears me into a smaller and more emaciated sense of place. As Colin and I drove toward the beach, Tofino appeared to me as inkblots of green and boxy shapes that suggested the occasional house. Maybe restaurants. Or clog shops. How am I supposed to know? It鈥檚 a peculiar frustration, to come all the way to this island only to feel like I鈥檓 trapped in a child鈥檚 pencil sketch.
鈥淭his is Chesterman Beach,鈥 Colin said as he parked the car. 鈥淟et鈥檚 see how it looks before we suit up. This is where I used to live in the treehouse.鈥
Though he doesn鈥檛 reside in Tofino anymore, Colin has been coming here for 25 years. His first taste of cold-water surfing was at Chesterman, when he was 14, and his love for this fishing village was strong enough that it drew him back after high school to work odd jobs and share the waves with killer whales and lumberjacks. It was the mid-’80s and he was 17, a sponsored skateboarder ready to join the celebrated Bones Brigade team.
Giddy to his core, Colin held my elbow and pulled me like a wagon down to the beach. The waves sounded large, breaking on the shore with the hollow clap of a belly flop.
鈥淒id your hearing ever get in the way of your skateboarding career?鈥 I asked.
鈥淣o. Not at all.鈥 He paused for a moment. 鈥淲ell, except when I was competing. Sometimes I鈥檇 be on the run in a halfpipe and find out that they鈥檇 been asking me over the PA to get off for a while.鈥
Sign language wouldn鈥檛 have helped. He only knows how to sign 鈥渨et paint鈥 and 鈥渂e fruitful and multiply.鈥 Didn鈥檛 matter, though. He鈥檇 already had enough of competition. He went to college and gave up the skateboarding circuit altogether, ducking out of class when the weather reports told him he had six hours to catch a ferry and drive the three hours of switchbacks to this beach.
I listened to Colin stare at the water. I think. Sunsets are about as informative to the ear. Maybe he was waiting for some assurance that I really wanted to go through with this. A go sign.
鈥淚鈥檓 ready,鈥 I mustered.
鈥淣ope, this is slop,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e鈥檒l try Cox Bay. It鈥檚 got different exposure. Don鈥檛 worry, we鈥檒l get you up.鈥
IT SURPRISED ME TO learn how popular these frigid waters are: even with late-summer Pacific hovering around 50 degrees, there were still about 20 people in the water at Chesterman.
Wasn鈥檛 always this way. Charles McDiarmid, part owner of Tofino鈥檚 legendary , grew up here, before the first logging road connected the fishing village to the rest of the island. McDiarmid showed me around his astonishingly tactile hotel, putting my fingers on its hand-worked timber beams and decorative glass floats. Occasionally, you鈥檒l find such floats washed up onshore, lost from their Japanese fishing nets across the ocean. I鈥檝e never touched rooms more revealing of place than this.
鈥淏ack in the ’50s,鈥 he explained, 鈥渨e had one guy in town who surged. That was it. Then the whole surf culture exploded in the ’60s, and most important for us, wetsuit technology got better and better.鈥
After that, everybody looked at the waves differently. And the surfing population got another bump when the Vietnam War draft resisters from the U.S. found work as loggers and fishermen on Vancouver Island. The Californians saw an untapped opportunity for their boards, or so the legend goes.
At cox bay, about a 10-minute drive from Chesterman Beach, Colin and I were met by Devo, a local instructor with the , who arrived in her school鈥檚 pink Volvo. For all I know, Devo has no last name, and it wouldn鈥檛 surprise me. She radiated the mellowness that comes of a career split between working as a nature guide and teaching people to surf. I hitched my hand to her elbow for guidance down to the water. The nerd-rock band Devo probably didn鈥檛 have biceps like her.
Devo made a plan. She would pitch me toward shore and Colin would catch. The proposed system calmed me a bit, but I also felt a little resentful at the extra care. Why can鈥檛 I drown like everybody else? Would diminished risk diminish what surfing is really like? We changed into our gear. I began by shoving my feet into the arms of my wetsuit.
鈥淚鈥檓 a bit rusty,鈥 Colin said, or threatened. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 get out as much since I started teaching, you know.鈥
From our old logic class, Colin had carved a line into a position as a philosophy professor at Kwantlen Polytechnic University, a suburb away from our old alma mater. He lectures like nobody鈥檚 business and can, on occasion, answer questions that sound awfully similar to the ones he鈥檚 been asked. His specialty is the ancient puzzle, last updated in The Matrix, 鈥淗ow do we know we aren鈥檛 in a dream?鈥
I often ask myself the same thing. Always with me, whether I鈥檓 stripping down in the cold or feeling for the shape of my wetsuit, is my proximity to the phenomenal nature of things. Close your eyes and much of the world is extinguished. I refused gloves, not wanting to blind myself further, and I took off the neoprene hood covering my ears. Reduced to smell and taste, I would be less a body, more a floating brain. How close to death can you dress a man?
Devo took the lead. We dropped my longboard, and she mimed the basic dance steps necessary to get up and balanced.
鈥淟ie on your stomach and put your hands like this,鈥 she began.
鈥淟ike what?鈥 I said.
鈥淟ike this.鈥
鈥淲hat鈥檚 鈥榣ike this鈥?鈥
You can see the problem. Devo switched tactics and put her hands on me like a sculptor. After a couple of dry runs, pushing myself up from the sand and swinging my feet under me, that was it. We waded into the icy push of the bay. I had no image of what I needed to do, only a faint new muscle memory of movement. Not much confidence comes of that. Put your fingers on the guitar like this and this and this. Now go play Led Zeppelin onstage.
As we slogged to the break, Colin yelled out some critical instructions in the event of a fall. 鈥淢ake sure you stay under a bit, and put your hands above your head,鈥 he shouted over the waves. 鈥淵ou don鈥檛 want the board to come back and hit you.鈥
Great, I thought. Falling large objects. The very thing blind folks are known for tracking.
BY THE TIME WE鈥橠 fought the waves chestdeep, I came to recognize the rhythm in the bay鈥檚 suck and punch. Though I couldn鈥檛 see the swells coming, I unconsciously took on their music and could anticipate when to turn my shoulder, cut into the wave, and brace for another slam. As we humped to the break, what bloomed in me was a sensation, a confidence, I鈥檇 been estranged from for a long time. It was a feeling of physical capability. The force of water that had blown me back and off my feet was now my partner. I鈥檇 learned to move with it on my own, nobody guiding me. When was the last time I鈥檇 walked this far without my cane? Without a friend鈥檚 elbow? Years. I was free.
We stopped when the water was just shy of my shoulders. The bunny slopes, I heard people call it. You may worry that there鈥檚 little thrill in that. Then again, blindfold yourself and wander through traffic to the post office. Just try to call it a stroll.
鈥淎fter this bump,鈥 said Devo, 鈥済et on your board, belly down, and stabilize. When I say 鈥楧ig,鈥 paddle hard until I shout to get up.鈥
Before I could ask where Colin would be, the bump hit me and I scrambled aboard. The water rushed a bit faster, almost like a stream, and the faint sound of Devo shouting 鈥淒ig!鈥 popped in the air. I did as I was told. Then I lost her voice. No go signal. Just ocean in my ears and the plunking of my paddling hands.
Then I felt it.
A gentle lift. A rushing boil of water from behind me. This had to be it. Devo鈥檚 voice was buried in the wind. Colin was gone. I arched my back, pushed, thrust my left foot forward, and did the twist. You cannot write the simultaneity of a body in motion. Feeling for the sweet spot, the balance between our flesh and the buck of the ocean, I stood. Sort of.
In those few seconds, unsteady as a child, I felt all the drama of the Pacific give way. If you can鈥檛 see the world rushing by you, and if the wind is gusting about, nothing imparts a sense of movement. I was standing still. I could have been on a wet sidewalk.
But I did have a view. Instead of ogling the world from this rare angle, looking back at the beach, my attention dove deep inside. Like a baby, I was aware of every facet of muscle and balance a body calls upon to hold itself up. What an impossible miracle it is.
鈥淵ou鈥檝e got it!鈥 Colin hollered from a few feet away. He was surfing parallel, watching out for me.
Yes, I鈥檝e got it, I thought. Then it fell away, and so did I, on top of Colin. My face ground along his board, and we turned into a submerged head of disabled men.
Though I did get up a few more times and for longer stretches that morning, nothing reproduced my first buzz. I鈥檝e never stood still like that before. Gravity, inertia, tide鈥攅verything, it seems, wants to take us down. Yet we stand.
Four hours later, when the carbs were gone and I could barely catch a breath, I flashed Colin the time-out signal. My hand tethered me to his elbow once again, and we waded our way back to shore.
鈥淲ell?鈥 he asked. 鈥淲hat do you think? Think you鈥檒l do it again sometime?鈥
鈥淗耻丑?鈥
鈥淒o you think you鈥檒l ever鈥斺
鈥淗耻丑?鈥
Colin reared back and shoved me down into the water, laughing. I flung myself at him. Boys in a locker room, knocking our stupid bodies around.
鈥淟ook out!鈥 he said, and pushed me under, into silence.