The Code
The Power of I Will
By World-Champion Surfer Shaun Tomson with Patrick Moser
The Code
The Power of I Will
Digital Edition 1.0
Text 2013 Shaun Tomson and Patrick Moser
Photographs 2013 as indicated throughout
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced by any means whatsoever without written permission from the publisher, except brief portions quoted for purpose of review.
Gibbs Smith
P.O. Box 667
Layton, Utah 84041
Orders: 1.800.835.4993
www.gibbs-smith.com
ISBN: 978-1-4236-3430-0
To Carla for her love, support, and radiant smile. To Luke for a new beginning. To my father and mother for their positive spirit and faith. To Mathew, whose love is always with me. To Tracy and Paul for always being there. ST
For Linda Trinh, Miles Trieu, and Ryan Trinh Moser. PM
Shaun Tomson has written an important and engaging book filled with wisdom and practical advice about personal growth and overcoming the inevitable challenges adolescents and young adults everywhere face. All adolescents, all parents, and better still all adolescents and their parents together would do well to read and ponder the inspiration and lessons contained in these pages. |
Michael Weitzman, MD, Professor of Pediatrics and Psychiatry, New York University School of Medicine |
Shaun has simplified some very important concepts that are relevant to each and every one of our kids. He relates these concepts in stories to his work as a surfing professional, encouraging our youth to where they are motivated to act in a positive manner. I will is a resounding mantra for youth of today. This is a great piece of literature that I humbly suggest is read by our children and their parents. Together they can and will change the world. |
David Edelman, MA, MBA, MFCC, President, Board of Directors, Santa Barbara Boys and Girls Club |
Shauns candidly unique insights into his ride provide hope and promise to new generations in following their dreams on their own personal wave. |
Diana Starr Langley, Chair, Board of Directors, United Boys and Girls Clubs of Santa Barbara County |
Often, the story of a champion in sport is characterized by determination, focus, commitment and dedication and that is indeed true with Shaun. However, Shauns insights are much more powerful and inspiring because they transcend competition and apply to all of our lives. Through the power of I will comes the call to live a connected, purposeful and principled life. |
Jim Weber, CEO, Brooks Running |
The Code is a guide for self-empowering decision making and provides the tools to effect positive change. It draws on Shauns life experiences as both a world champion surfer and a father, giving insight and inspiration to young minds. |
Pat ONeill, President and CEO, ONeill Wetsuits |
The world today is very much like a wave: its shifting and changing virtually every second. Like surfers, we are defined by the decisions we make in this dynamic environment. Shaun draws on a life of learning, both on waves and off, and offers some sage advice for drawing the best line through life. I love this book. |
Jim Moriarty, CEO, Surfrider Foundation |
Shaun Tomson will always be a surfing legend, but if history is just hell be equally revered for his work out of the water. The Code cements his status as one of surfings great thinkers and its lessons carry weight and value for everyone. |
Brendon Thomas, Editor, Surfer Magazine |
Introduction
A number of years ago a surfing friend of mine, Glenn Hening, invited a group of kids to a surf contest at my adopted home beach of Rincon, a famous break that straddles the county lines of Santa Barbara and Ventura in Southern California. Glenn is also a teacher and environmentalist, and Rincon was facing a severe sewage problem during winter rainsthe time of year Rincon breaks best. He was holding an event to bring attention to the issue and to encourage homeowners along the beach to modernize their aging septic systems and help clean up the water. He asked me to present each kid with a keepsake to remember the daysomething that would encourage them to become more environmentally awareand he gave me a budget of $120.
My wife, Carla, and I ran an apparel company at the timeSolitudeand it would have been easy for me to grab some gear for the kids or use my contacts in the surf industry to get a pile of surf-related products donated. Instead I went home, sat down in front of my laptop, and quickly wrote out the twelve most important lessons that surfing had taught me about life: twelve lines, 105 words, each lesson beginning with the words I Will. It was all done in twenty minutes. I had no fixed objective, no targeted number of words, just the idea of getting something down that I thought would be useful and important to these young people. The lessons fell into a natural order, one by one, like a twelve-wave set that Ive often seen at my favorite break in the world, Jeffreys Bay in South Africa. When I was finished I titled the lessons Surfers Code.
I had the lessons printed onto one hundred plastic cards at a local shop, and it cost me $120right on budget. I handed them out to the kids at the event. I told them that I didnt create the code, I simply wrote down lessons that were already out therein my heart and in the hearts of many surfersbut that sometimes get overlooked in our busy lives. After my little talk the kids asked me for more cards for their friends and family.
The cards turned into a groundswell, and I began giving talks at various schools and other gatherings about the life lessons that surfing had taught me. I handed out more cards and even put them in the pockets of the boardshorts that were in our Solitude clothing line. The talks eventually evolved into a book called Surfers Code , in which I told the stories Id learned from traveling around the oceans of the world and how I used surfing as a metaphor for riding the waves of life. I gave motivational talks from Las Vegas and Abu Dhabi to Johannesburg. I spoke to multinational corporations like Disney, Cisco, and General Motors, and I shared the stage with successful businessman Sir Richard Branson and best-selling author Malcolm Gladwell. No matter the audience I always stressed the fundamental lessons that surfing had taught me about life. I talked about a simple code I had learned that helped me deal with fear, defeat, and personal tragedy.
This book was inspired not by the surf or by my international speaking engagements but by a small group of kids I spoke with at Anacapa School in Santa Barbara, California. Id been invited to give a talk by Headmaster Gordon Sichi, a surfer I met out at Rincon one day. After I spoke with the students and engaged in some lively discussion, I decided to give them an assignment. I told them Id written the original Surfers Code in twenty minutesa quick exercise to capture the essence of what was important to me. I told them, Create your own code. Take twenty minutes and tell me about all your goals. Begin every sentence with the words I Will. About a week later Gordon sent me their answers. They were beautiful, sensitive, full of humor and hope. In essence the kids wrote a series of promises they had made to themselves.