
Deborah Jones from California, who wrote “Surfers,” says that her writings are typically confessional poetry. But despite my best efforts to contact her and establish whether she’s a surfer or non-surfer, this question remains unanswered. To me, this means you can read this poem in two different ways.
I stood on the pier and watched the ocean
The waves crashing unto the shore
The kids and dogs playing in the surf
The distant sounds of laughter
carried on the wind…
And the surfers almost below me
The way they tracked the waves
While straddling their boards
Watching the waves build
Pushing the tip of their board down
To dive under them like seals
Waiting for the one they will ride to shore
So isolated from each other
So solitary in their sport
I wondered, do they think about anything important?
Ponder anything heavy?
Or do they just wait for the next wave?
And the only decision they have to make
Is whether to dive under it
Or let the tip of the board rise
Above the crest of the wave
And ride it
When your thoughts are in another place or time,
Your actions lose much of their effectiveness.
I think surfers must be in the moment
Only thinking about the next wave
And the possibility that it
Will be the one worth riding
And maybe a brief moment of regret
That the one they just let pass
May have been an opportunity
But just a brief and fleeting thought….
Because the next wave is already approaching






