This post is a little long. Anyone who is curious, Rodney Mullen invented the 1st flip trick on skateboarding and about 80% of the flip tricks you see today on video or tv. He has an interesting take on skateboarding where he states you have to try and fail over and over with physical pain to land 1 trick. This process of physical failure to achieve, gives skateboarders a good lesson in life.
sammorrowdrums|11 years ago
It's not just failure:
It's the combination of accepting failure (despite risk) with imagining solutions and new concepts, and meticulously applying them until you succeed.
That is what many skateboarders do, and I know that first hand. I'm now a professional coder.
You look at the a bit of land, and imagine ways you could skate it, you look at your board and imagine how you could spin it, or stand or slide on it, and you just try and try and fail and try until you succeed. It's hard to express the creativity and drive you need to have to get anywhere on a board.
Personally, I find my iterative creative mindset and my ability to accept failure help me at skateboarding, coding and lead me at one point to be a pro musician too... These skills exist in many areas. Skateboarding is just incredibly hard to attain any real level of skill at.
visakanv|11 years ago
You have to have faith that you can do well, but you also have to acknowedge the hard facts of reality.
You have to be kind, but you also have to be firm and not a pushover.
You have to help people, but you can't be taken advantage of.
You have to get out of your comfort zone, but you have to avoid burnout.
So on and so forth.
agumonkey|11 years ago
alex_anglin|11 years ago
bennesvig|11 years ago