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.PP
.ps 10
Of course, no number of boards would ever be enough.  After his
bedroom was full, he began stacking them in the garage.  This drew
complaints from his mother, who, aside from the space considerations,
also had questions about some of the decks' graphics.  Geo promised to
get rid of (some of) them.
.PP
.ps 10
This led to his part\-time business buying, selling, and trading
skateboards.  If anything, it only exacerbated the problem.  Now he
also needed a large work area where he could package up and label the
boards.  His mom gave up complaining when he started paying for his
own food and clothes.
.PP
.ps 10
Geo's best customers were his friends.  Where once they had made fun of his
super\-hero costume, now it had become a sort of group mascot.  He
devised a logo based on the costume, and had it made into a rubber
stamp for marking the bottom of the decks he sold.  It was popular
with his friends.
.PP
.ps 10
Presently, Geo's biggest problem was that he was getting bored with
skateboarding.  Not the business; the business was fine.  But with
skating itself.  He told no one about this crisis of faith, and the
profits continued to pour in.

.PP
.ps 10
When Geo finally did give up skating, it was for health reasons.  His
knees, his back, his hips; none of them were working as well as they
used to.  It made him sad, but what was he supposed to do?
Break himself against the world?