10 Problems Only Skateboarders Will Understand

By Samuel Clements /

2. Injuries

You don€™t see scars and injuries as a mark of weakness or failure. They aren€™t symbols of where you failed to land your trick. They are like a badge of honour; battle wounds that act as a reminder of how hard you fought to land an elusive trick. You€™ll wake up the morning after skating hard and find that your knee is twice as big as the other one, and then you€™ll vaguely remember falling on it. Or you€™ll fall, hurt yourself, and then spend the next few hours trying to work out how you managed to fall in that way, especially if it was on a supposedly simple trick. Then comes the worst part about being injured; it isn€™t about the pain or the fear that people will laugh at you. The worst feeling in skateboarding has to be looking out at a glorious sunny day, thinking that the weather looks perfect for a nice long skate, then realising that you are stuck indoors because of your injury. There are few feelings worse than this. You know you are missing out on valuable time, because as soon as winter comes there will be hardly any time to go skate.