Poseidon’s Revenge

Describe a positive thing a family member has done for you

The sun was setting quickly over the island and from my vantage place 50 yards offshore, I had to shield the glare with my hand to see the beach. As I rose up and down on my board with the swell, I thought about how much I liked Carolina Beach. 

CB…as it’s known to the locals…is tucked away in the southeast corner of North Carolina on a barrier island between the Atlantic Ocean and the Cape Fear River. There are several good beach breaks and on a clean day, dozens of surfers are in the line up.

CB offers free music and outdoor movies in the summer and is home to the 761-acre Carolina Beach State Park, one of the few places in the US where Venus Flytraps grow wild. There are a lot of chill beach bars, and sunsets on the Cape Fear are not to be missed.

Sunset, Cape Fear River. I’m on the ferry, a cool 20-min trip across the mouth to Southport, NC

But on this particular day, I had little time for such ruminations; the tide was right, the offshore wind perfect, the waves just the right texture and height. I had enough light left for one or two more rides before calling it quits and lugging my board down the darkening beach for home.

At least, that was the plan.

Horizontal rule

The youngest kid sometimes gets a raw deal. 

The old joke is that if the oldest kid drops a pacifier on the floor, it gets boiled. For the second kid, it gets run under the warm tap for a few seconds. For the third, a quick wipe on the pants is good enough.

Growing up, it was just me and my older brother Doug; so while I didn’t get the full third-kid treatment, I distinctly felt the ho-hum reaction at times. Also, Mom and Pop had figured out what things had worked well for the oldest…and which had cratered…and consequently I was denied the opportunity of, say, racing the Jon boat down the canal and ramming into a rock outcropping.

So I was mindful of this and when the Good Lord blessed Sue and I with three kids, I tried to treat them all the same. But in retrospect, I might have tipped the scales a bit overly far in favor of the youngest, my daughter Kari.

She and I have covered a lot of ground together. Archery lessons, guitar lessons, nine years of outdoor fun in the YMCA Indian Princess program. Saturday mornings at Home Depot, building stuff together at their kids’ workshops. Surf lessons.

Kari on a mellow day at CB
Kari (4th from left) and me (left) with our Indian Princess tribe

She’s my confidant, cheerleader and constant companion.

And on this particular day, she had a far more important role.

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I saw a wave coming; you can tell by the telltale hump before it gets into shallow water and rears up into a break. I hesitated. It looked a lot bigger than the waves I usually took. Oh well. I turned and paddled.

This is a good surf spot, the remains of a fishing pier that was destroyed by a hurricane
Hurricane Arthur, 2014. The eye was 50 miles offshore, but the conditions were brutal.

I realized too late that this rogue wave was indeed huge, probably double overhead. I fell off the board going down the face and had a split-second look at the sun dipping below the trees on the empty beach. The wipeout was so rough it tore the leash off my ankle, and the wave carried my board all the way to the beach. I emerged from the foamy, sandy maelstrom and saw it far off, washing back and forth in the surf. Time to call it quits.

I’m a good swimmer, and after about minute or two of effort, I looked up, expecting to be almost to shore. 

Hmm, interesting. I hadn’t moved at all.

OK, I guess I need a little patience. I rolled on my back and after five minutes of backstroking, flipped over—to see the same thing. Not a yard of progress. In fact, it looked like I was a little farther out.

A mildly interesting situation became concerning, then alarming, then panicky as I began to tire. Sidestroke, dog paddle, crawl…and, except for arms and legs that became like lead, zero change. I looked up and down the empty beach that was growing darker by the minute. I kicked myself. I had violated the cardinal rule of surfing: never surf alone.

My fatigued brain didn’t register that I was caught in a rip current. All I needed to do was to swim parallel to shore for a bit and then I could have headed in; but there were no tell-tale ripples, no debris floating past me. I was 50-60 yards away from safety in a rapidly darkening ocean. I understood now why the danger is often unnoticed until it’s too late.

I saw someone heading in my direction. Kari. She saw my board and I could see her cupping her eyes and looking up and down the beach for me. I’m not sure how she spotted me, but when she did, she flew down the beach, turned my board around, and pushed it in my direction.

The power of the current was now all too evident; the board bobbed like a paper boat in a storm drain and made it out to me in an astonishingly short time. With the last of my strength, I climbed aboard and laid for several moments with my face planted on the waxy fiberglass, gasping and thanking God.

Horizontal rule

That night, a subtle family dynamic was evident as Kari’s portion of dessert was roughly twice that of her siblings and she got to choose the movie. 

Sue, of course, was a mixture of concern and exasperation and her sisters looked at me with open mouths as Kari recounted the tale in excitement for the third time.

As she spoke, I looked out the sliding glass window at the now-dark ocean. Far out to sea, a ship’s lights were faintly visible. I shuddered to think that if it hadn’t been for Kari, I might be halfway to that ship, tumbling along the ocean floor with the outgoing tide.

Psalm 116:6 says “The Lord protects the simple; I was brought low and he saved me.” 

That day, it was in the form of my youngest daughter 😎

© My little corner of the world 2026 | All rights reserved

Images by author and Meta AI

7 comments

  1. Well good morning! What a way to start my day! Angels – especially our own angels are truly here for a reason. This story will stay with me for so many seasons to come.

    Thank you for sharing this with us. I felt every wave of this (no pun intended). We may not be reading this coffee in hand if not for your Kari.

    Kiki

    Liked by 1 person

  2. Thank goodness your daughter was there, Darryl. Being raised in a landlocked area, I know zip about surfing. What’s a leash?
    Birth order definitely makes a difference for sibs. I’m the eldest of five and my parents were extremely strict with me. By the time my youngest sib was born, I was finished high school. Myself and my other sibs marvelled at what she “got away with”. We came to the conclusion that our parents were worn out by the time she was born.

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  3. That was riveting. I cannot imagine the fear. I love the water. Deep. Mysterious. Beautiful. Scary. I am absolutely drawn to it. I love to be around it, and sometimes on it, but not in it. Great chapter, Darryl.

    Liked by 2 people

  4. Oh, my! Clearly, Kari is your guardian angel in human form.

    Scary stuff, but scarier still that conditions were such that someone who grew up in Florida would miss the rip current. We hear about them constantly; to think that someone who knows and understands what to do and STILL is caught in a life threatening situation chills me to the bone. I think my next beach visit will be to Sanibel and the quiet Gulf.

    As always, just beautifully written. I couldn’t help but be pulled into the action. You did it again!

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  5. Man… this made my day. You already know how I feel about the beach, the waves, surfing… all of it just hits something deep for me. I could picture every moment like I was right there with you. And those photos? I loved them. Seriously, they brought the whole story to life.

    But wow… that part in the water got real fast. That kind of quiet danger is no joke. I’m so glad she saw you when she did. That wasn’t luck. That was God showing up right on time through her. Gave me chills reading it.

    Also, I love the way you talked about her. You can feel that bond, all those years built into one moment that really mattered. That’s something special.

    I’m just really thankful you’re here to tell this story.

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  6. Thank God your Kari was there. And I’m glad you are still here ❤️
    I loved the verse you included – how appropriate for us all.
    Your pictures are both a reminder of how beautiful and beloved family is and how merciless Mother Nature can be.

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