Read How Did I Get Here Online
Authors: Tony Hawk,Pat Hawk
The foundation’s true mission, it turns out, goes beyond simply giving skateboarders a curvy place to play. We’ve discovered that the benefits that derive from the process of getting a skatepark built, while not tangible or quantifiable, can be just as valuable as the product itself. If it’s done right, a skatepark project can teach young people a lifelong lesson in the power of perseverance, and remind adults that kids with funny haircuts and pierced lips not only can be good people, but also can get things done.
Despite all of the mainstream credibility that skateboarding has received in recent years, many adults still regard skaters as disrespectful troublemakers. Business owners chase them away. City officials pass ordinances to impede them. Police give them tickets. Stigmatized as outsiders, many skateboarders grow up feeling disenfranchised, and the institutionalized image of skaters as delinquents becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy.
In a lot of towns, though, a skatepark—and the effort that goes into getting one built—has proven to be the perfect hammer to break that cycle. At its best, it works like this: A skater gets in trouble (maybe a ticket, maybe a call home from the principal) and complains to his mom and dad that he has no place to skate. His parents persuade him to write a letter to City Hall, or to attend a city council meeting. The kid gets some friends together, puts on his cleanest shirt, sits through a boring meeting, and then makes a nervous but respectful plea for a skatepark. City officials, impressed by the courteous request, decide that it’s a good idea and order their parks-and-recreation staff to look into it. The city agrees to donate land for the skatepark but requires the skaters to find the money to build it.
With the help of one or two city officials and a handful of parents, the kids form a committee and spend the next year or two raising money and community awareness. They apply for grants. They hold car washes, barbecues, raffles, and skate-a-thons. They do yard work for their neighbors and donate the wages to the skatepark fund. Eventually, the whole town rallies behind the determined youth brigade. The police chief writes an editorial in the local newspaper praising the kids for their efforts. The local Lions Club holds a pancake breakfast, and the hometown newspaper runs a photo of some beribboned World War II vet flipping flapjacks for skaters.
This is when attitudes change. The kids realize that the adults really want to help them, and the adults realize that the kids are willing to work hard for this thing they love. Most important, the kids discover that they can actually accomplish something by working within the system rather than beating their heads against it or sitting at home complaining about it. They learn how to communicate in a way that will encourage adults to listen, and they go from feeling alienated to empowered.
I don’t want to sound sappy, but I’m convinced that when teenagers, parents, police, politicians, business leaders, and civic groups all get together and push the same wheel, and that wheel actually turns, the effort alone makes the world a slightly better place.
Not to mention that the kids end up with a place to skate.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Lhotse Hawk
Riley Hawk
Spencer Hawk
Keegan Hawk
Kadence Hawk
Frank Hawk
Nancy Hawk
Lenore Dale
Pat Hawk
Steve Hawk
Alan Deremo
Pamm Higgins
Dick Dale
Greg Dale
John Dale
Hagen Deremo
Emily Deremo
Will Hawk
Cameron Hawk
Ray Underhill
Kerry, Keaton & Olivia
The Mortimer family
Greg Smith
Catherine O
Matt Goodman
Barry Z
Maximillion Cooper
Julie Brangstrup
Jackass crew
Christian Jacobs
Cindy Dunbar
Trent Reznor
Rob Sheridan
Jaimie Muehlhausen
Seth Venezia
Jared Prindle
Sandy Dusablon
Shaun Anderson
Steven Perelman
Kevin Staab
Mike “Rooftop” Escamilla
Kim Novick
Miki Vuckovich
CC Flashman
Kirsten Kuhn
Irene Navarro
Angela Rhodehamel
Matt Haring
Derek Richardson
Steve Haring
Ralph D’Amato
Jesse Fritsch
Kris Sale
Jim Guerinot
Larry Tull
Lisa Kidd
Sarah Hall
Daniel Burch
Lisa Shotland
Lowell Taub
Michael Yanover
Lloyd Frischer
Maggie Dumais
Brian Dubin
Andrew Muser
Eric Zohn
Peter Hess
Richard Charnoff
Marc Geiger
June Horton
Amy Flax
Ron Opaleski
David Schwab
Krista Parkinson
Bobby Kotick
Will Kassoy
Joanne Wong
Antonio Ramos
Ryh-Ming Poon
Mike Fulkerson
Kathy Vrabeck
Ron Dornink
Yale Miller
Hjalmar Hedman
Lisa Hudson
Dave Pokress
Jeff Kaltreider
Scott Pease
Joel Jewitt
Josh Tsui
Kehau Rodenhurst
Dave Stohl
Bob McKnight
Danny Kwock
Russell Nadel
Greg Macias
Greg Perlot
Guy Channin
Josh Katz
Marty Samuels
Mathieu Darrigrand
Matt Ramirez
Mike Matey
Nicolas Foulet
Steve Tully
Bill Bussiere
Alex Chalmers
Andy Jones
Andy Macdonald
Bam Margera
Bob Burnquist
Brian Deegan
Brian Sumner
Bucky Lasek
Carey Hart
Chad Kagy
Clifford Adoptante
Colin McKay
Daewon Song
Dave Mirra
David Loy
Dennis McCoy
Derek “Ghost” Burdette
Derek Burlew
Donny Barley
Drake McElroy
Dustin Miller
Elliot Sloan
Eric Koston
Graham Gustin
Greg Garrison
Jamie Bestwick
Jason Ellis
Jean Postec
Jeremy “Twitch” Stenberg
Jeremy Klein
John Parker
Kerry Getz
Kevin Robinson
Kris Markovich
Lance Mountain
Lincoln Ueda
Lyn-Z Adams Hawkins
Mat Hoffman
Matt Ball
Matt Beach
Matt Buyten
Micky Dymond
Mike Cinqmars
Mike Escamilla
Mike Mason
Mike McGill
Mike Vallely
Neal Hendrix
Ocean Howell
Paul Zitzer
Randy Ploesser
Rick Thorne
Rodney Mullen
Ronnie Faisst
Rune Glifberg
Ryan Scheckler
Scott Taylor
Sean Eaton
Sean Nielson
Sergie Ventura
Shaun Gregoire
Shaun Stulz
Shaun White
Shawn Hale
Simon Tabron
Stacy Peralta
Steve Berra
Steve Caballero
Steve Nesser
Todd Richards
Tom Stober
Willy Santos
Alex Macleod
Bill Silva
Bruce Haynes
Bruno Musso
Carl Harris
Craig Sneiderman
Dave Seoane
David “Gurn” Kaniski
Ed O’Leary
Ian Voterri
Jill Berliner
Jim Reeder
Jody Morris
Josh Smith
Lowell McGregor
Mike McGinley
Mike Relm
Nick Jeen
Peter Harper
Pierce Flynn
Ray Woodbury
Ryan Young
Shelby Meade
Sound Image
Suzy Shortt
Terry Hardy