Nick Gabaldón's Human Design Chart

Design
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    Design
      Personality

        Chart Properties

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          Nick Gabaldón's Biography

          American pioneering surfer credited by surfing experts with being California’s first documented surfer of African-American and Latino descent at a time when many beaches were segregated and opportunities for minorities more limited than today. Despite being an amateur recreational surfer rather than a professional competitive surfer, he is widely considered a role model for his part in the history of surfing and African American history in the areas of Santa Monica and California.
          His mother was Black and his father was Latino. Very little is known of his childhood. He lived most of his life in Santa Monica, California and was one of 50 black students at Santa Monica High School during the 1940s. Gabaldón taught himself how to surf at a 200-foot roped off stretch of demarcated beach which was part of Santa Monica State Beach. This area of beachfront was informally referred to by names such as “Ink Well Beach”, “Negro Beach”, and other more derogatory names. In 1924, after the forced closure of black owned and operated Bruce’s Beach and due to de facto segregation, that portion of beachfront near Bay Street and Ocean Boulevard became the only place in Southern California that racial minorities were freely allowed to use without harassment or violence. The area remains popular with African American Angelenos up through present day.
          Gabaldón died on 6 June 1951 when he crashed into the Malibu Pier while attempting a surfing move known as a “pier ride” or “shooting the pier”. At that time, there was a south swell that came on, creating some of the biggest waves known in that area. Gabaldón’s surfboard was found immediately, but it would be 3 to 4 days before his body was found washed up on Las Flores Beach, further east of the Pier. The coroner ruled that Gabaldón died as a result of drowning. He was 24.
          Link to Wikipedia biography

          Nick Gabaldón's Chart
          Your Type is like a blueprint for how you best interact with the world. It's determined by the way energy flows through your defined centers and channels in your chart.