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	<title>LongboardNOW.com &#187; longboarding is a way of life</title>
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		<title>Longboarding aint just for kids no more</title>
		<link>http://longboardNOW.com/longboarding-aint-kids/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sat, 10 Jul 2010 20:38:40 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Longboard Mike</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Longboarding]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[getting older]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[longboarding is a way of life]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[skateboarding]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://longboardNOW.com/?p=474</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Columbia&#8217;s Jason Zoellers, a 36-year-old counselor, skateboards Sunday at MU&#8217;s Turner Avenue parking garage on a longboard, a type of board that doesn&#8217;t work well for tricks, but allows surfing-like movements on wheels.   ¦ MICHELLE KANAAR/Missourian BY Ben Frederickson COLUMBIA &#8230; <a href="http://longboardNOW.com/longboarding-aint-kids/">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a>]]></description>
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<div><img src="http://www.columbiamissourian.com/media/multimedia/2010/07/05/media/070410_Longboarders_05_t_w600_h1200.jpg" alt="" /></div>
<p>Columbia&#8217;s Jason Zoellers, a 36-year-old  counselor, skateboards Sunday at MU&#8217;s Turner Avenue parking garage on a  longboard, a type of board that doesn&#8217;t work well for tricks, but allows  surfing-like movements on wheels. 					  <strong>¦</strong> MICHELLE KANAAR/Missourian</div>
<div>BY Ben Frederickson</div>
<div>
<p>COLUMBIA – The silence of the deserted parking garage is replaced  by the sound of urethane wheels carving concrete. One rider shifts his  balance from his heels to his toes as his skateboard serpentines down  the decline. The other follows close behind. What once was a parking  garage has been transformed into a concrete ocean.</p>
<p>&#8220;There’s something about when you’re on that board carving,” Jason  Zoellers said. “There’s a freedom, and this feeling like you are surfing  concrete.”</p>
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<div>MoreStory</div>
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<div>Related Media</div>
<ul>
<li><a href="http://www.columbiamissourian.com/multimedia/photo/2010/07/05/skateboarder-deron-rehma-st-louis-goes-low/">
<div><img src="http://www.columbiamissourian.com/media/multimedia/2010/07/05/media/070410_Longboarders_01_t_w180_h400.jpg" alt="" /></div>
<p></a>Skateboarder Deron Rehma from St. Louis crouches down to steer his  board along a sidewalk Sunday at MU. Rehma has been skating with his  friend Jason Zoellers of Columbia for about two and half years.</li>
<li><a href="http://www.columbiamissourian.com/multimedia/photo/2010/07/05/skateboarder-jason-zoellers-adjusts-his-wheels/">
<div><img src="http://www.columbiamissourian.com/media/multimedia/2010/07/05/media/070410_Longboarders_04_t_w180_h400.jpg" alt="" /></div>
<p></a>Jason Zoellers checks his wheels on a skateboarding outing Sunday at  MU.</li>
<li><a href="http://www.columbiamissourian.com/multimedia/photo/2010/07/05/skateboarders-go-around-bend/">
<div><img src="http://www.columbiamissourian.com/media/multimedia/2010/07/05/media/070410_Longboarders_03_t_w180_h400.jpg" alt="" /></div>
<p></a>Jason Zoellers and Deron Rehma lean into a curve while skating a  sidewalk Sunday at MU.</li>
<li><a href="http://www.columbiamissourian.com/multimedia/photo/2010/07/05/planning-their-skateboard-route/">
<div><img src="http://www.columbiamissourian.com/media/multimedia/2010/07/05/media/070410_Longboarders_02_t_w180_h400.jpg" alt="" /></div>
<p></a>Jason Zoellers, left, and Deron Rehma plan their route on a  skateboarding outing Sunday at MU. Rehma is from St. Louis but often  comes to Columbia to skate with Zoellers.</li>
</ul>
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<p>This feeling is what brought Zoellers, a 36-year-old counselor  from Columbia, and Deron Rehma, a 48-year-old sales consultant from St.  Louis, back to skateboarding. It is a sport they fell in love with as  children, and returned to as adults. They have not always skateboarded,  but the sport has always been a part of them.</p>
<p>Zoellers began cultivating his interest in skateboarding as a  teenager in St. Charles. His parents supported it, as long as he  performed well in school and stayed out of trouble. He recalls a launch  ramp his father constructed to resemble the one in his favorite skate  movie, “The Search for Animal Chin.” Zoellers’ father took the ramp away  after two neighbors suffered injuries. Eventually, Zoellers’ interest  in skateboarding was also taken away by the excitement of getting his  driver&#8217;s license.</p>
<p>Rehma still thinks about the time he lost. “I quit skateboarding for  25 years. I just wish I could have five back,” he said.</p>
<p>When it came time for Zoellers to attend MU in 1992, he no longer  skateboarded, but he maintained an interest in the sport. He credits his  love for punk rock music to the skateboard culture. His passion for  punk led him to an interest meeting at the KCOU radio station his  freshman year. The then-Amy Satterfield also attended the meeting. She  had always liked the way skateboarders carried themselves, especially  the way they cut their hair.</p>
<p>“I would peek over and be like, ‘He has exactly the kind of hair that  I love best.’ He had like the floppy skateboarder hair,” Amy Zoellers  said. “I thought, I would never forgive myself if I didn’t marry a  skateboarder. I had always thought skateboarders were cute when I was in  high school.”</p>
<p>The couple began a nine-year friendship that led to marriage. The two  never officially dated. Four years after their 2001 wedding, their son  Clyde was born.</p>
<p>Before heading to the parking garage Sunday, Zoellers and Rehma stop  at Tiger Plaza to talk to Peter Ramey and his 3-year-old daughter,  Aglaia as they make their way to ride the concrete figure-eight sidewalk  that dissects Carnahan Quad. Ramey and Zoellers go to church together;  Aglaia Ramey and Clyde Zoellers are friends.</p>
<p>“Peter used to surf,” Zoellers said.</p>
<p>Zoellers hands Ramy his LongBoardLarry custom skateboard and lets him  try it out. Aglaia gets her chance too, riding on her dad’s lap as he  sits on the board and pushes with his hands.</p>
<p>Zoellers has never surfed, but it led him back to skateboarding. He  watched the surfing movie, “Riding Giants” and admired the skills of  surfers like Laird Hamilton. He began researching surfing on the  Internet and came across the <a href="http://www.silverfishlongboarding.com/">Silverfish Longboarding  website</a>. This kind of boarding was not for the ocean, but designed  for the streets. The longer boards allow surfing-like movements on  wheels. The Silverfish site claims to be “everything longboarding,” and  connects longboarders worldwide through forums broken up by geographical  regions. Through the forum for the Great Plains, Zoellers met Rehma and  other members of the <a href="http://www.facebook.com/home.php#%21/group.php?gid=42889298194&amp;ref=search">St.  Louis Old Man Skate Cartel</a> in 2008.</p>
<p>That year, Zoellers packed up the first longboard he owned and drove  to St. Louis for his first attempt at a parking garage. He was less  experienced than the group he met, and found himself at the back of the  pack. Rehma slowed down to join him.</p>
<p>“I kinda hung back and started talking to him,” Rehma said. “He was  super nice, and I think he mentioned he was a Christian, which I am as  well, and that gave it a little bit more of a boost to the interest.”</p>
<p>The friendship forged in a parking garage continued to grow. Rehma  met Zoellers&#8217; parents, his wife and son.</p>
<p>Zoellers and Rehma continued to longboard together, also making  regular trips to the skatepark in St. Charles with shorter skateboards.</p>
<p>For Zoellers, skateboarding was more than just a hobby. It was a  release from the troubling things he had to listen to at his job where  he works primarily with troubled youth.</p>
<p>“When he first started doing it again, I thought it was great,” Amy  Zoellers said. “I thought it was important to him to find outlets  considering his job.”</p>
<p>Jason Zoellers was making trips to Cosmopolitan Skate Park at 6 a.m.  every day before work. He found that his skateboard not only offered an  escape from work, but a tool he could incorporate into his counseling  career.</p>
<p>“A lot of times with teenagers you have to take an indirect  approach,” Zoellers said. “You can’t let them know what you’re up to  because they will smell you right off, and shut you right down.”</p>
<p>Something as little as noticing a pair of Etnies skate shoes on a  client, or relating skateboarding to bicycle motocross can lead to a  connection that breaks the ice.</p>
<p>“Skateboarding has been really good because it is a way to get a kid  not focusing on why they’re at the counselor&#8217;s office,” Zoellers said.</p>
<p>From St. Louis to his annual skateboard trips to Southern California,  Rehma has also discovered younger skateboarders accept and embrace him.</p>
<p>“There’s a mutual respect that goes back and forth,” Rehma said.  &#8220;They don’t just say, ‘Oh he’s some old dude, who cares?’ They seem to  think it’s cool.”</p>
<p>With the respect, comes realization. The men have learned to  recognize their limits.</p>
<p>“The fear level as you get older goes a little bit higher,” Rehma  said. “When I was 17, my fear factor was pretty low. You don’t think  about falling, and when you do fall, you get right back up. Part of it  is because you only weigh 72 lbs. Now I weigh 172 lbs. When you fall  now, it’s like somebody throwing a bag of bricks to the ground. I mean …  you fall hard.”</p>
<p>Zoellers fell hard at the St. Charles Skate Park in June of 2008.</p>
<p>&#8220;I come up and turn and all of a sudden I hear this ripping sound in  my knee,” Zoellers said. “I tore my ACL completely in half, fell 8 feet  on the concrete.”</p>
<p>Rehma came to Zoellers’ aid.</p>
<p>“I didn’t see it happen, but I walked over and saw him laying in the  bottom of a giant bowl. We put him on my skateboard and pushed him to  his car,” Rehma said.</p>
<p>“Skateboarding has been great to me, but it’s also been horrible to  me. My knee was wrecked,” Zoellers said.</p>
<p>Zoellers did not step on any kind of skateboard for a year.</p>
<p>“When he hurt himself it was a hardship because we don’t have good  medical insurance,” Amy Zoellers said.</p>
<p>That summer was more than financially stressful for the Zoellers. Amy  was left in charge of taking care of Jason’s recovery as well as  2-year-old Clyde.</p>
<p>The day Jason returned from the hospital was the same day his new,  custom made LongBoardLarry longboard arrived at his doorstep.</p>
<p>“I told my wife to burn it,” Zoellers said. “I never wanted to see it  again.”</p>
<p>Jason never burned the board, and eventually regained the desire to  step back on, this time with a different approach.</p>
<p>“Since then I’ve really mellowed out,” Zoellers said.</p>
<p>He no longer park skates on the smaller boards, sticking to less  dangerous rides on his longboard.</p>
<p>“In a way he has to be more careful than I do,” Rehma said. “If he  could cut loose and this was his last day on earth, I have a feeling he  would let it rip quite high, but he’s got to take care of things.”</p>
<p>Amy Zoellers is at ease.</p>
<p>“With the longboard, I don’t really worry,” Amy Zoellers said. “He  has explained the distinction to me, and I know that he has got the  common sense to realize that he’s 36 and he’s not going to be doing any  of those ramps.”</p>
<p>Zoellers and Rehma are ready to call it a day. They stand atop the  fifth level of Turner Avenue Parking Garage. It is the second year the  two have met on Independence Day to ride the abandoned MU campus, and  they both plan on continuing the tradition.</p>
<p>There were no mindboggling stunts, no kickflips, just long, graceful  curves on concrete.</p>
<p>“The bottom line is, skateboarding has had the biggest impact on how  my life has turned out,” Zoellers said.</p>
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