“You either fight or surf!” is, of course, the famous choice posed by Col. Kilgore in Apocalypse Now. In the madness of battle, Kilgore gives his soldiers a blank choice between two missions—take it to the waves or take it to the enemy.
Screenwriter John Milius later revealed that the scene was inspired by a comment made by former Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon during the Six-Day War of 1967.
After winning a battle at Aqaba, Sharon went spear diving, as one does, shot some fish, and ate them with his staff, saying, “We’re eating their fish,” as if to say, “We came, we saw, we conquered, we fished a little.”
I’m not recommending either spear-fishing or surfing in the midst of battle. They’re both madness. But battle in and of itself is madness. In both cases, real and fictional, the pursuit of joy, of mastery, in such a mess is presented as a tunnel through the madness.
We are all in our own private wars with the future, because the future (spoilers!) inevitably brings death to each of us. But in this era of rapidly-advancing technology, it first brings obsolescence: the death of permanence.

