I also work at a surf shop, mostly just manning the counter, helping people pick out their new stick, waxing up rental boards, arguing about prices... (I am so not used to prices being negotiable, and I don't own the shop so quit asking me!) The owner of the shop is a talented local board shaper and for who knows what reason when I asked him if he'd teach me he agreed to show me the ropes. I've started the process doing ding repair, meaning I am learning to work with epoxy and poly foam boards, patch fiberglass and sand the repairs back into the original shape. It's dusty, messy work and there is something inherently nerve-wracking about going at someone's several hundred dollar chunk of glass covered foam with an electric sander, but I love it. I've always liked working with my hands, so it's not a bad fit for me at all. I've just started doing boards for paying customers and I have to admit I'm still a little scared when people show up to pick up their boards, and then relieved when they are happy with them. I've gotten a lot better, but I still oversand, end up with air bubbles in the resin, or don't quite get the resin-wax-catalyst ratio right and have to retouch or even redo steps. Like my surfing though, it gets better every time and I feel good about the process (most of the time).
I feel like I'm building a life here. I have opportunities I doubt I could have hoped for back in the States and definitely wasn't finding in Michigan. I love the community here. Above all I love the surfing. I've had so many sports and activities in my life that I enjoyed, but nothing has come close to what surfing has been for me. There is so much here that feels right for me, but at the same time I'm incredibly torn. You see, I've always been a huge believer that the people in our lives make the difference; that it is always the people and not the place that make a life or an experience rich and happy. I still believe that, but I find myself looking at a life that I love, that feels so much better than it has for years, but that centers around a small remote surf town in Costa Rica while the most important person in my life, my best friend, and the person I have loved more than anyone else is back in Michigan for the foreseeable, long term future.
I feel like I've been given a box of jigsaw pieces that come from two different puzzles and they won't fit together no matter how badly I want them to match up. For months I've been cycling between ignoring it and hoping something comes up to make it work and feeling like I have to choose and struggling with the guilt that I selfishly do not want to leave what I have here. I worry knowing that if I were to go back I would be doing it knowing that I would be trading a lifestyle that I love with good people, work I find fulfilling (but not lucrative enough to afford to make the trips to sustain a long distance relationship long term), opportunities to learn and do things I'm interested in, and far more freedom in almost every aspect of life than I had stateside, for a single, incredible person. I don't want to place the burden of my happiness on one person like that. I truly believe that that cannot be sustainable no matter how strong the relationship is. And I don't want to hurt him or mislead him. I don't know what I am doing or where life is taking me and he deserves better than to be strung along indefinitely. I want him to be happy and I know that I can't do that for him right now. I don't know if I ever will. I do hope that someday I will be at a point in my life that I can. Maybe if I am incredibly lucky he will still be there when I am. I hope he knows that I love him even though I'm not able to show it like I want to now. I don't know how to live in two worlds, but I don't know how to choose between them either.