Relapse
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About this ebook
A fourth generation fisherman, Jake Anderson grew up in the rich fishing environment of Anacortes, Washington. At age seventeen, Jake began salmon fishing in Bristol Bay, Alaska, and by the age of twenty-five he was crab fishing in the heart of the Bering Sea. Soon after, Jake became a deckhand on the F/V Northwestern and joined the popular television series "Deadliest Catch." As an integral part of the show, Jake is known for his hardworking nature that has allowed him to evolve from greenhorn to licensed captain.
Aside from fishing, Jake has a harrowing story that has yet to be told. As an avid skateboarder, Jake aspired to become a professional until he was sidelined by injury, addiction, and homelessness. After relentlessly battling back, he was then confronted with the untimely losses of his sister, father, and mentor, Phil Harris. But with depth and maturity, Jake persevered. In his debut book, "Relapse," Jake serves as an inspiration as he candidly shares his private journey to overcome tragedy.
Jake Anderson
Jake Anderson (born September 16, 1980) is a Bering Sea crab fisherman aboard the fishing vessel Northwestern. Since 2007, Jake has been featured in all seasons of the Discovery Channel documentary television series "Deadliest Catch." Jake was hired as a greenhorn by captain Sig Hansen aboard the Northwestern in 2007. In 2010, Jake was promoted to deck boss of the Northwestern, and in 2012 he obtained his USCG Mate 1600-ton fishing license and Master 100-ton fishing license. Jake resides in Seattle, Washington, with his wife, Jenna. As an avid skateboarder during the off season, Jake is sponsored by the American footwear and clothing company DVS Shoes. He has a signature skateboard shoe released through the company. During a 2012 interview with Dr. Drew Pinsky, Jake admitted that he is a recovering alcoholic and his addiction left him homeless for two years.
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Book preview
Relapse - Jake Anderson
1
Proud Alcoholic
I was a proud alcoholic. All of the best fishermen were alcoholics and I wanted to be just like them. But before long my addiction overpowered me. I became an alcoholic, an addict, and a criminal. I became the man I most feared. Guilt stricken and ashamed, I thought I was doomed to death. In fact, I never thought I’d survive past the age of twenty-five. But before my addiction, and long before I was a fisherman, I was just a skateboarder.
Skateboarding was my first addiction. It was my original drug. Growing up in the small town of Anacortes, Washington, in the ‘90s, skateboarding wasn’t popular. You weren’t supposed to skate. But from the time my cousin, Josh Petrin, brought me with him to buy his first skateboard when I was ten years old, skateboarding was my life. Josh was seven years older than me and someone that I looked up to. I saw him and his cousin, Jason, living the skateboarding lifestyle and I wanted to be just like them. When they told me what some of the most talented guys could make their skateboards do, like flipping their boards or making their boards jump to their knees, I knew that I wanted to do that, too.
By the time I was thirteen, I was meeting my friends every day after school behind the Safeway store in Anacortes to skate. We’d all dress up to try to be skateboarders. We’d put on oversized shorts, beanies, and mustard colored sweatshirts, and we’d skate till dark. I loved skateboarding, but I didn’t fit in. In fact, I was horrible at it. I could barely stay on my board and I was terrified of falling. But every day I watched my friends skate and I tried to copy what I saw. Slowly I started picking it up–but it didn’t come easy. It took me over a year to learn how to kick flip and after that I was too scared to jump even three stairs. It took me a while to catch on, but after another year of practicing I finally started to improve. I began skateboarding all the time, and the more I practiced, the better I got.
In Anacortes, kids like me didn’t exist. I was a skateboarder living in a small town where skating was taboo. There were no skateboarding competitions. There were no skateparks. There was no way for me to see if I had any real talent. All that I had were some skateboarding magazines and a few professional demos to watch. Those were the only times that I could see what professional skateboarders actually did. I had no idea that the tricks I saw in those magazines were the best tricks the pros could do. I was able to imitate a lot of what I saw, and I didn’t realize that was anything out of the ordinary. I was just doing what came natural. By the time I was seventeen, I started doing tremendously well for myself. As my addiction to the sport grew, I wanted to see how good I could get and how far skateboarding could take me.
When I was a senior at Anacortes High School, I partnered up with my best friend, Casey Rigney, and we started skating together every day. We fed off each other and we became inseparable. Whatever we did, we were always together. Kids at my school used to tease Casey. He had bright red hair and looked kind of nerdy, so they would call him red or nerd. But I stood up for him. He was my best friend and the only person I knew who could outskate me. Casey was more of a technical skater. He could do almost every trick left-handed and right-handed. He did a lot of manuals, ledges, and handrails. He was known for the way that he could make his board slide and grind on long handrails. He could do anything he wanted with a skateboard. I had a lot fewer tricks, but I was notorious for jumping huge stairs by the time I was eighteen. I used to practice by jumping off ten foot tall shipping containers that were lined up behind the Safeway store. I would climb on top of the containers, run full sprint, jump on my board, and do tricks off them to practice.
The more Casey and I skated, the more we believed that we were destined to become pro skateboarders. I already knew that I wasn’t going to college. I didn’t have the grades and skateboarding was all that I cared about. We wondered what it would take to find sponsors who would actually pay us to skate. When you’re eighteen and living in a small town like Anacortes, getting paid to skateboard would mean you’re God. We knew that if we wanted to make it as professionals, we’d have to start producing skate videos that demoed our tricks. Filming at the Safeway in Anacortes wouldn’t help us at all. It was an unknown spot in a small town that no one cared about. We wanted to find a popular skating spot that sponsors would pay attention to. The closest place to Anacortes that had any kind of skateboarding crowd was Vancouver. The drive from Anacortes to Vancouver was only about two hours, and it was before 9/11, so it was still easy to cross the Canadian border. Casey and I would just grab our IDs, get in his car, and head up north.
We ended up going to Vancouver almost every weekend when I was eighteen, and those were some of the best times of my life. Vancouver was the first place we had ever been to where there were other guys like us. In Anacortes we were outcasts, but in Vancouver we found other skateboarders trying to push the sport like we were. The skateparks in Vancouver were well known to sponsors, too. They knew the terrain, how big the stairs were, and how long the rails were at places like White Rock Skatepark and Griffin Skatepark. That meant the footage we shot there would actually mean something. We had no idea what sponsors were looking for, so we would leaf through our skateboarding magazines like Transworld and Big Brother, pick out the Vancouver skate spots, and then go to those locations and film ourselves doing tricks that had never been tried there. We thought that if the sponsors liked what they saw, then we were in. Looking back now, it wasn’t a bad idea, but Casey and I were definitely a different breed. Most amateurs were skating in competitions to find sponsors, but we were doing it our own way.
Jake Anderson and Casey Rigney
On the way home from one of our Vancouver trips, Casey and I decided that we needed to go where the best skateboarding connections were if we were serious about turning pro. Vancouver was definitely an improvement over Anacortes, but the best skateboarding at the time was down south in Los Angeles and San Diego. I don’t remember whose idea it was to move to California, but I think we both always knew we’d end up there, trying to do something better with our lives. By the time Casey and I made our decision to move, we had just graduated from Anacortes High School. It was the perfect time in our lives to take a chance and see if we could turn our dreams into reality.
For the first trip to San Diego, I had planned to go alone and stay with family friends while Casey stayed behind in Anacortes. I was going to check out the area to see if our dream was even possible while Casey saved up enough money to pay for our move to San Diego a few weeks later. I made the 1,300-mile trip to San Diego and stayed with our family friends, the Malloys, a few days after high school graduation. The Malloy family moved from Anacortes to San Diego a few years earlier so that my friend, Michael Malloy, could play basketball. At my high school, sports were never taken too seriously, so the best athletes often had to move out of the area if they wanted to be competitive.
Before I left for San Diego, I told my family about my decision to become a professional skateboarder. My parents were very supportive, just like they always were. My dad, Keith, was highly educated. He was a former Marine and had a doctorate in psychology. He served as a high school counselor and always encouraged me to follow my dreams. I’m sure he was disappointed that I wasn’t going to college, but he never tried to change my mind. He knew how much I loved skateboarding and he wanted me to be happy. My mom, Donna, is