Surf Dads share their wisdom
Dane Grace
Lessons from the surf became lessons in life, as youngsters at
Newport Heights Elementary School were reminded Friday that drugs are
not good for them.
The students, adorned in red Hawaiian leis and sunglasses,
participated in Red Ribbon Week, which was capped off at the school
Friday with a visit from Surf Dads Against Drugs, who drove home the
anti-drug message.
Tyler Collin, 10, of Newport Beach, seemed to get the message.
“It was cool,” Collin said. “You shouldn’t do drugs.”
Red Ribbon Week is a national event in which schools promote
healthy, drug-free lifestyles. The week honors Enrique “Kiki”
Camarena, a Drug Enforcement Administration special agent killed in
1985 by drug traffickers.
The message Friday was conveyed using unlikely tools.
Bill Sharp, Big Wave Contest director for Billabong XXL, talked
about his experiences with the successful surfers he’s met.
“Everyone, to do what they do, to keep their minds sharp, to stay
in top physical condition, has to stay away from drugs,” Sharp said.
In his experiences with big-wave surfing, Sharp said he’s seen
surfers team up with jet skiers to help pull them out into waves that
a lone surfer couldn’t navigate.
Surfing had become about partnership and teamwork. For him, it
isn’t a lone sport anymore, both in and out of the water.
“If some of your friends mess around with drugs, you are their
lifeguard,” Sharp said.
Fourteen men from Surf Dad’s Against Drugs stood dressed in red
wetsuit tops and swimming trunks and held surfboards. With their
theme “Too Cool for Drugs,” the dads offered slogans like “get stoked
on surfing and not on drugs” and “surfing is about doing the right
thing.” Even Newport Heights Principal Kurt Suhr, who is also one of
the Surf Dads, added his message.
“I wanted to talk about being passionate,” Suhr said to the
children. “There are a lot of things that are easy to do. It’s all
about finding things that are positive and that you’re passionate
about.”
Sharp later took the microphone and held up a four-inch fin from
the underside of a surfboard.
“This is called a fin and this is how you maintain control,” Sharp
said. “If you’re on drugs, you have no fin, and there is no way to
maintain control.”
The dads then turned their surfboards over to reveal a single
letter on each that turned into a message: “Say no to drugs!”
“You guys look awesome in your glasses and red leis,” said Terry
Torres, Newport Heights PTA president. “This week is the week that we
celebrate putting good things in your body as opposed to putting bad
things in your body.”
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