Well I'm sure it will make it down there - keep an eye out for it - I hear you Aussies have a huge surfing/beach cult thing going on also. LOL
It has a lot to say about - well something I say all the time - Chance favors the prepared mind. After being a 'myth' for something like two decades, one of the original 4 released the story to some surfing mag, and on the day the kid is ready to ride there are tons of people there to do the same thing. (The waves only do this in very specific conditions, only a few weeks per year) But the old guy made young guy practice and train, so most of the people who go out end up taking the boat back in - they were not ready for it. But Jay had prepared, so his fears were mitigated by knowledge.
It's like the people who ask me - "hey Kat, how did you do all the things that you've done in your life" and my answer is "I didn't wait for you." A lot of perfectly peek moments were shared by me, myself and I. I tried to get people to go, to do, to be - but the Hall of Lame Ass Excuses is a pretty huge place I guess. But, if no one wanted to go, screw 'em, I went ahead and did it anyway. And it turns out that I like Me, Myself and I, so that wasn't so bad. And as I'm thinking here one of the top Lame Ass Excuses that people have for not doing things is that they didn't have someone to do it with. I did that stuff because if not me, then who? If not now when? And if none of my friends would go with me, I'd make friends on the journey - and rest assured (and I told them, and still tell them) 'no big loss.' They apologize to me for not going, and I stand there and think that I don't need an apology because it didn't matter to me, I did whatever it was (and it was good). They should be apologizing to themselves, all they did was make their life a little more boring, a little more dull - hey, no skin off my nose.
And I'll be happy to admit that I've been too bold - reckless even - on more than one occasion. But timid and careful make you a couch potato not an adventure. I've been aggressive, but passive only leads to being a victim. I willfully run over people's feelings, oh well - & hey, sorry, I'll send you a Hallmark Card in a decade or two. Perhaps. And I've also broken laws, ignored rules, flaunted authority, took advantage, challenged order, ordered chaos, did whatever it takes, whatever the party calls for. I've been a misfit, a constant troublemaker, a notorious free spirit and a spy in the house of love --- and all that got me plenty of 'authority time" with the pioneers and visionaries (and was quickly rewarded because those two groups know not just how to get around the law, but how to live like there was no law at all.) And I know all those things, they are traits shared by all journey agents, visionaries, pioneers, drama queens, innovators, revolutionaries, activists, stars, heroes, mavericks, philosophers, prophets, saints, mystics and agents of change. Besides, Ya know ya can't make an omelette without breaking a few eggs, so it goes.
But I would like to say that I was NEVER a non-conformist as wicked people have attempted to label me. I can't be a 'non' conformist because that's a reaction to conformity, and I don't even entertain the notion of conformity itself.
And those are all the people who are out there, like Jay - knowing that life is either a daring adventure, or it's nothing.
didn't just live for the moment; he was willing to die for it
Valor - good word, and it's almost always found when people are not just living for the moment, but living IN the moment. There is a clarity and certainty in being in the moment like that which allows for much greater action, and a much greater range of options.
And that's good. I've always like the ML King quote about "A person who does not have anything they would be willing to die for probably doesn't' have a life worth living.' (sort of, paraphrase, you get the idea)