Did you feel like you checked out of skating?
Oh yeah, I feel like I checked out of skating right after ‘Reel to Real’ came out. I ripped my ACL and I was taking a lot of pain killers; they kind of ran the show for a couple of years there. I was living this life of acting like the rockstars I heard about- Hendrix, Janis Joplin; who died young. I wanted to live fast, and when I was at my peak with I-Path, I pretty much could buy whatever I wanted; I had the Mercedes and the big house.. I wasn’t planning ahead.. I remember being 28 and- ‘Saturn return’ they call it- if you don’t make the right choices and change your life, you’re liable to just replay it all over again, and end up at the same place when you’re 60.
Was there one moment that made you stop?
It was gradual, it took having two more kids, it took a long time to open my eyes and see the damage I was doing to myself. I missed the class on how to live a healthy, grounded life. I always burnt the candle from both ends… My days were always detox/ retox/ detox/ retox: I was eating healthy and doing yoga, but at the same time, putting all this crap into my body and going out and partying.
Do you have regrets about the way you were treating some of those around you?
I do, I have a lot of regrets, a lot of amends to make to a lot of people...
2010/ 2011, things came to head. I’d sold I-Path to Timberland in 2008 and made a good chunk of money. I had started it, and it seemed so solid, like it was never going to go away; I just thought I would always have income from I-Path, that I was just lucky like that. But it didn’t work out like that. And when the company went corporate it lost it’s soul, it lost the grass roots authenticity. My partner and I had a falling out and we both got let go by the new owners. As soon as that happened, it was sort of a domino effect; everything started falling apart. I-Path ending made me reach my bottom quicker, but it probably saved my life at the same time. I definitely went to a dark place, and it took a divorce and almost losing my kids and everything I love, for me to climb out of that depression.
Did skating help you through all that? I always think that skating is always there for you, it can be a big help mentally.
Skating is such a good release, especially, for me, through the divorce and the stress of losing the brands and stuff. I really just wanted to skate for myself then. No-one wanted an ad from me, there was no-one to skate ‘for’. It all went back to that Sheffey feeling. Being in my body and being present, it just felt right, it’s my connection to the world.
I was so numbed-out before; now I feel like I have so much lost time to make up.
I’d actually like to start Rasa up again, I’m not sure what as, but something..