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bill of rights and lefts  

1 Pick the right spots for your ability and attitude.
 
2 Don't drop in on or snake your fellow surfer.  
3 When paddling out, stay out of the way of riders on waves.  
4 Learn to take turns.  
5 Respect the vibe in the line-up.  
6 Always aid another surfer in trouble.  
7 When travelling, respect the local surfers.  
8 Don't use your surfing advantages to abuse your fellow surfers.  
9 Be responsible for your equipment and respectful of others'.  
10 Relax, have fun, and enjoy your surfing and that of your fellow surfer.

Relax, have fun, and enjoy your surfing and that of your fellow surfer. It can be done! The presence of others in the water is an ongoing fact of life in lineups worldwide. Accepting this is the key to a healthy, flexible attitude in the water.

As Surfline.com's great old buddy Drew Kampion says: "Life is a wave, and your attitude is your surfboard!" More than anything else, crowd tensions in the surf can be eased by our individual ability to flow through situations and react positively when it's needed.

What do you think?
Discuss this bill in our community forum.

A positive attitude may seem to come naturally to some people and less so to others, but the truth is that attitudes - in the water, as on land - are made, not born. Here's a hint or two:

Surf a range of spots, not just one place. Instead of settling into - and eventually wallowing - in a comfy, well-protected wave catching groove, you'll automatically develop crowd-reading skills and learn to deal with (and appreciate) a wider range of other surfers.

Give every other surfer in the lineup the same credit as you supply to yourself. A conscious effort may be required on this one, since a surfer's natural instinct is to place him or herself at the head of any wave-catching line. Simply say to yourself regarding your fellow surfer: "He counts as much as me." You'd be surprised at how much difference this can make to your own mood in a crowded situation.

Smile. This particularly goes for the better, older surfers in any lineup. Although at times your patience is likely to be tried by first-stage surfers who don't yet have your surf awareness or skills, you can't influence a beginner in a constructive way by yelling at him/her - you'll only instill fear and anger, and wreck your own session through the bad vibe thus created in the lineup. Beginner surfers are normally a bit scared and excessively on their guard anyway. They'll never forget a kind word or good advice from a skilled surfer, and down the line, they'll pay it forward.

In the long run, that's truly the only way we can help make crowded lineups easier places to be.

 

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