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Until the grown-ups come to fetch us, we’ll have fun.

—William Golding, Lord of the Flies

FOOD LION SKATEPARK

ASHEVILLE, NC

There were fits and starts, but the real moment, at least for me, began when Leo nailed his first drop-in.

Clad in the protective plastic armor required by management—helmet, knee, elbow, and wrist pads—Leo stood at the rim of the concrete bowl, right foot on his kid-size board, waiting for an opening in the action. Half a dozen skaters were rolling in and around the U-shaped bowl, ranging from preteen to twenty-something to grandpa: a wobbly, pudgy, ponytailed old dude in a white tank top, happily swirling around the smooth surface like a golf ball dropped into a bathtub.

Leo had just turned eight and was determined to master the drop-in, one of skating’s landmark accomplishments, like catching your first wave, slapping your first base hit. He’d lean forward, lift his back foot onto the board, and tilt into the concrete belly, trying to time his descent and avoid a collision. Yet on each attempt, as he tipped over the edge he’d jump off and chase his runaway board. The other skaters would skirt around him or his board, and I worried they’d start getting pissed at this cute but annoying little noob. Instead, I overheard their coaxing: “Nice try, kid” . . . “You can do it” . . . “Almost, dude.” Even old ponytail weighed in with encouragement: “Try staying forward.”

Leo tried and bailed, tried and bailed, and I forced myself not to intervene. But I also realized he wasn’t actually bothering the other skaters. Despite his size and hesitance, he was one of them—or was about to be. The scene was so different from the baseball or soccer fields of his and Sean’s halfhearted forays into team sports, where typically only the best kids got to play. Here, amid the whoosh and thwack of polyurethane wheels on wave-shaped concrete, amid the shouts and laughs of boys, young men, and one lone girl, there were no jacked-up parents cheering or jeering at coaches and refs. Here, Leo’s coaches, refs, and teammates were his fellow skaters. And they were all pulling for him.

I realized something else as I sat at a picnic table, drinking coffee and pretending to read a magazine, our big white dog curled at my feet . . . Leo wasn’t on the sidelines or in the dugout waiting for the call-up. He wasn’t on JV hoping for a shot at varsity. I wasn’t stressed about whether he’d get a base hit or a foot on the soccer ball. He was out there in a muddle of skaters, all ages and skill levels, smaller than the rest but doing his best, trying the same maneuver again and again, which was enough to earn a spot in the mix.

After more than a dozen attempts, Leo pushed over the rim, leaned forward, rolled down the slope and kept both feet glued to his board. Arms wide for balance, he rolled up the other side, kick-turned and rolled back in. The other skaters circled in close, buzzed past him, and then . . . they clapped, or patted his back, or gave his helmet a tap. They said “yeah” or “nice!” or “good job.” One kid slapped his board against the lip of the bowl, which I’d learn was a skater’s form of applause. They didn’t make too huge a deal of it. It was subtle enough. But they’d all been watching as another tyke strived to join their club, as he achieved the feeling—of what, freedom? flight?—that they’d felt their first time.

Leo tried to play it cool, nodded his thanks, tamped down his smile. And Dad? A quick-to-cry softy, I had to turn away and hide my melty face behind my New Yorker.

Years later, I’d still get teary over the memory of that transitional day, long before my boys and their skating would bring me to tears for other reasons.

Leo’s inaugural drop-in wasn’t quite my introduction to skaters and skate parks. He and Sean—a year and a half older, now nine—had been skateboarding on and off for more than a year, and I’d been taking them on occasional skate outings. But like an anthropologist witnessing some tribal ritual in the wild, it was my first unfiltered exposure to the unexpected nurturing, the antithetical and empathetic embrace, of the culture of the board.

Don’t get me wrong. It’s not like the skate scene welcomed eight-year-olds with hugs and cookies. Like surfing and snowboarding, there was a rite-of-passage aspect to gaining entry into the club. If it’d been me trying to drop in, old ponytail might’ve elbowed me in the neck. But it’s not like there was a skater’s checklist, either. It was more about attitude. And whatever it was skaters looked for, Leo had it. Sean did, too, having graduated from Food Lion’s beginner bowl to the more challenging street-skating section, whose patrons were more tattooed and intense, no grandpas or toddlers.

This interest in skating was in stark contrast to their attempts at traditional sports. I treasure my shaky videos of Sean digging for worms in right field or throwing his mitt in the air as baseballs rolled past. Leo tried baseball (not bad, but not for him), then some soccer (pretty good, actually—he was fast), and later, somewhat bravely, basketball (surprisingly good, despite being the smallest kid on every team). Mary and I dutifully drove them to practices and games, encouraged their largely ho-hum efforts, whipped out the video camera when they got to play, displayed their framed team photos on a shelf. Yet, for all of us there seemed to be something missing, some spark that failed to ignite.

When skateboarding beckoned—a nightingale’s song? a siren’s song?—my kids found their tribe. Before we knew it, they were both pulled deeply into the skate scene, as were Mary and I, practically swept off our feet by this balletic sport and its eccentric cast of players. Much of what I came to appreciate about skating had been on display that day Leo dropped in. Namely: skating is hard, it takes lots of practice, it requires patience, persistence, self-reliance, and guts. It develops mechanical and navigational skills, social and negotiating skills, an ability to converse and collaborate with strangers young and old, while avoiding the creepers and the pushers who seem to lurk near skate parks. With no real rules, skaters had to be creative, innovative, imaginative. And they had to assimilate into a community that distrusted assimilation.

My boys met other skaters who were refreshingly familiar. Smart kids with a bit of attitude. Curious kids with a disregard for convention. They dressed semisloppily but with bits of flair—shoelace belts and skate-logo T-shirts, beanies or snap-back sports caps, skinny jeans or cutoffs. They listened to rap and hip-hop, whose slang and profanity became theirs. Some of the older skaters sported tattoos or earrings, dreadlocks, green hair, or a Mohawk.

What surprised me during those early days was just how polite and nice those raggedy skaters seemed. The badass outer shell some wore like armor—smoking or drinking at a skate park, for example, which we didn’t witness on the ball fields—wasn’t always matched by skater stereotypes: no pissed-off thugs, reckless ravers, or dumb-ass dropouts. It sometimes seemed as if my kids had revealed to us the secret truths about some misunderstood subculture, as if discovering that the Hells Angels knitted and played Scrabble.

Despite a few hard edges, or maybe because of them, my boys seemed more at ease among sloppy-slouchy skaters than with their more earnest T-ball teammates. So did I, happy to spend a few hours at a skate park with my laptop, a notebook, a coffee, a book, the dog. I’d sit at a picnic table, watching them practice or just leaving them alone, giving them their space as I wrote or read or walked the dog.

Mostly—since there wasn’t a coach to ask “how’re they doing?”—I hovered at the edges, a voyeur. I didn’t try to join them or coach them. I let them discover skating at their own pace. Leo quickly became the bolder one, drawn to the bowls in the “vert” section, while Sean preferred the technical precision (and outlaw hint) of the flat-ground “street” section. In time, they’d both gravitate—for reasons that’d only later become obvious to me—toward the urban, off-limits aura of the style known as street skating.

At the start, Mary and I were totally, Kool-Aid-drinking on board. Maybe even a little relieved. It was a culture that meshed nicely with our own sensibilities. We were fine not spending weeknights and weekends alongside other parents in bleachers or on sidelines. We were comfortable in our roles as mostly hands-off skate parents.

We loved that they were outdoors and active, day after day. They’d skate for hours, getting sweaty and sunburned, stopping to gulp Gatorade and chips. Between bouts of skating, Sean and Leo would cluster with other skaters, asking about their “setup” (board, trucks, wheels), or their shoes, or their tricks. I was intrigued by all the nonverbal negotiations. Who rolls first into a bowl? All it took was a nod of a head. My board hit your shin? A shrug served as an apology. Nail a trick? The tapping of a board was your applause.

There was always someone a little better, or a lot better, and I’d see the boys studying the good skaters, taking mental notes. I once nervously watched Sean stand at the lip of a steep bowl for what seemed like ten full minutes, at the edge of the action as other skaters dropped in beside and beneath him. Sean then turned and walked off without dropping in. When I asked him about it, he shrugged. “Just watching.”

As a team sports alum—baseball, football, and track, always solidly mediocre, until I discovered my own boards, waterskiing and, especially, skiing—I’d never witnessed a sport without hierarchy: coaches and refs, varsity and JV, starters and bench warmers. Skaters taught themselves, coached themselves, policed themselves. They never had to wait for an authority figure to give them permission to play. The skate park was a communal playground, almost familial: we’re in this together, a league of outcasts, let’s all just get along!

As a work-at-home writer, I had the flexibility to drive them to and from skate parks. That put me on the front line, as observer and facilitator. Encouraged by their passion, I pushed them to explore skating to its fullest. Later, I’d discover that not every park was as mellow as Food Lion Skatepark, not every skater a misunderstood angel.

My initial view had been hopeful, a bit narrow, even a bit clueless. In fact, before we knew it, our sons were pushing beyond the cute introductory phase into the darker corners of skate culture. That beckoning, that exploration of the shadowy side . . . turns out that was skateboarding, too. By then, there was no turning back. I’d find myself wishing I could’ve cornered that old guy from Food Lion, grabbed his ponytail, and asked, Why didn’t you warn me?

And later, when I wondered how and why things got so fucking messy and hard, I’d imagine the old guy’s laughing response: Dude, you steered them right into it.

Leo’s drop-in at Food Lion marked the start of my soon-to-be-complicated role as a skate dad. I watched as my kids joined a subset of postmillennial boys for whom skating represented more than a hobby or sport; it was an articulation of who they were, and who they weren’t. They were smart boys with sporadic interest in academics, seemingly allergic to conventional expectations. They were part of a growing demographic: distracted, disenfranchised, bored. They were drawn to the whiff of outlaw, the sounds of gangsta rap, and eventually the stink of weed. And they all shared two maddening traits: noncompliance and its angrier cousin, defiance.

From their first steps, their earliest words, both boys strived to navigate the world on their own often intractable terms. They wanted to have fun. They didn’t understand the point of so many rules. They didn’t respect boundaries. They considered themselves outside the herd. They cherished the words no and why and why not. Skateboarding—a sport built on defying grown-ups, defying mainstream mores, defying gravity, fear, prudence, safety—helped them define their terms, and would stoke the battles to come.

On the parenting spectrum, Mary and I fell somewhere left of the dial, in a loose-leashed zone of liberal boundaries and tolerance. We walked a fine line, though—or tried to. We loved them dearly, fiercely. But we decided early on that we’d stay out of their way, much as our parents had. We’d let them explore and be free, shooing them into the world but preventing them from veering too far. We’d be willing to let them fail. And we’d soon find ourselves tolerating everyday misdeeds that’d give a hard-core Tiger Mom a stroke.

We had no idea that by opening the door to skate-rat culture that we’d invited something wild into our home, as if Jeff Spicoli, Sean Penn’s surfer-skater-stoner dude from Fast Times at Ridgemont High, came for dinner and never left. Spicoli would become the devilish voice whispering in my kids’ ears: “Hey, Bud, let’s party!”

The story of raising sons, especially willful challengers of authority, is universal, it’s biblical. So’s the lure of the dark side. Everyone knows a teen rebel, and/or they were one themselves. Some parents tighten their grip, keep their kids close, pack their schedule with violin lessons and drama club and other building blocks to an impressive college application. Others, either by choice or resignation, give their kids the space and freedom they demand, and hope they find their own way.

When I first started writing about my kids and their skating, I envisioned a story about the gnarly history of an American-born sport that became a refuge for boys like mine. But over time I found my gaze turning inward, the journalist that I’d once been taking over, aiming questions at myself. Have I been a good father? Have I ignored the danger signs? Am I the one who welcomed Spicoli and Co. into our lives? Have I given my boys too long a leash? And why didn’t I anticipate that they’d exploit it? Just as I had.

Then again, I wasn’t alone. I’d chosen a like-minded partner, someone as impetuous and rootless as me, someone who thrived on a bit of disruption, even a bit of chaos, who wrestled with the same parental questions: How do you raise unconventional, freedom-seeking kids to be self-reliant but obedient, happy but successful, good but free, free but safe? Throughout all the battles to come, it’d be us against them, and them against the world. This is a story of survival. Theirs, and ours.