In the grand tradition of survival stories ("Alive," "Into Thin Air") comes Norman Ollestad's adrenalin-charged memoir, "Crazy for the Storm." The book is a celebration of Ollestad's father, a larger-than-life personality who was both a trial lawyer once employed by Bobby Kennedy and an extreme-sports junkie who lived for surfing and skiing.In 1979, a small private plane carrying Norman, along with his father and his father's girlfriend, Sandra, crashed into the face of the San Gabriel Mountains. Ollestad Sr. was killed instantly, as was the pilot; Sandra was mortally wounded. Suddenly, it was up to 11-year-old Norman to use the skills he'd learned during an unconventional childhood to fight his way toward safety.
Read Ollestad's harrowing story, after the jump.
An Uninhibited Life
Norman Ollestad grew up in the hippie-friendly, surf-crazed neighborhood of Topanga Canyon, Calif. (A certain charming young man named Charles Manson used to frequent the area back in the '60s.) Though his parents were divorced, Norman's father lived just across the street and was an active part of his son's life. "He would surf in the mornings," Ollestad explains, describing the way his dad drove him to school. "He picked me up in his little '56 Porsche and his hair still had beads of water on it. He's brushing his teeth in the car. All the mothers would be dropping off their kids; here my dad rolls up, no shirt, brushing his teeth. Seeing the contrast between him, his attitude, his big smile, to the other people -- more buttoned-down, more inhibited -- I noticed that." And Norman's father wanted to make sure that his young son got a taste for the ocean himself, which sometimes meant strapping the 1-year-old boy to his back when he went out to hit the waves.
At the same time, Norman Sr. was no California slacker. He was a highly successful trial lawyer -- albeit one with a taste for bow ties and unconventional suits. Aside from working for Kennedy he was once employed by the FBI, later writing a book ("Inside the FBI") that attacked the agency and J. Edgar Hoover's leadership. "He didn't believe that you only have one thing -- he thought you could do everything," Norman says. "He just had a general, beautiful, uninhibited approach to life."
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Wednesday 17 June
By sabrina19585
Despite the wild adventures, mistakes and things most parents wouldn't approve of, Norman Jr. says, "A lot of what he taught me is [that] you create your own reality, you create your own pleasure," he says. "You don't just sit back and have it fed to you." Most people today have yet to learn that lesson mainly because their parents instilled different belief systems. Just think for a moment how different many people would be if their parents taught them, at an early age, "to pursue their dreams, don't be afraid to make mistakes, and life is what you make it." I think that's the message here.
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Wednesday 17 June
By CynCity
Sounds like just the book I want my sons to read, and me as well. Very touching and proof that although we as children may be irritated by our parents and embarrass them in their world.. and as parents lose hope that our children understand us and the lessons we try to pass on to them.. it all comes together.. well done!
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Wednesday 17 June
By June
What an amazing story. Your father was one very special and amazing man. If only more father's spent more time with their children and actually taught them more about life, the world might be a better place.
I am so very touched by your story.
Thank you so much for sharing your story.
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Wednesday 17 June
By KATHLEEN
The story is really encouraging me to sell my house and my stuff and travel to all the places I have ever wanted to go.. Follow my Dads path he took from D-day to Bastone where he fought in WW11. Can't wait to read the book Norman.
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Wednesday 17 June
By yuya
it was a amizing story.
I think its the best story i ever heard in my life.
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Wednesday 17 June
By Larry
Chantelle you don't know the Bible well at all. Before leaving comments like this, which was uncalled for, as this was for once an excellant article, you could have left condolences. Read your Bible, go to St. John, chapter 8. Jesus says to the crowd, "He that is without sin among you, let you cast a stone at her". I could give you many chapters, but this isn't Bible school, where maybe you should go.
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Wednesday 17 June
By Mickey
This is life. Not only do young people need
stories like this, but the older ones too.
Why stop living because you get a few wrinkles.
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Wednesday 17 June
By eb mike
Just finished reading the book and it was excellent. The father is a bit over the top but as a father of young boys, I was moved by it.
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Wednesday 17 June
By tree
I will order this book immediately. We have been supplied with all the skills and intelligence we need to live/love in this world. No one can do it for us. We were made human, will make mistakes and learn from them. I have made many and grown spectacularly because of them. Life without risk is life without life.
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Wednesday 17 June
By ykwcg
Forget the book, they need to make a movie out of it.
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Wednesday 17 June
By Ron
Hello, did anybody notice that three died? That is not an adventure, that is more like a death wish.
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Wednesday 17 June
By coach
Is it possible there is a connection to the book attacking the FBI and the plane crash? You just can't ever be sure when you talk about the J. Edgar Hoover spooks.
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Wednesday 17 June
By Mary Moses
Sure makes me wish I had a relationship with my parents. I had to find out on my own that we create our own reality and that freedom and heaven can be acheived by changing our internal dialogue. What a bunch of crap I had to go through simply b/c I wasn't loved. Glad it's over now. Mary Moses~hrmagoo.com
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Wednesday 17 June
By Victoria Jones
I am a 4th grade school teacher so I interact with children that are the same age as he was when the accident happened. I set forth each year to try and help children of this age understand this very concept that this father instilled in his son...it's OKAY to "MESS UP" every once and a while, as long as you learn from it and to be disappointed at times in life (especially while young), teaches us one of the BEST SURVIVAL SKILLS EVER!! So many parents today try to be their child's friend and don't want to tell them "NO" or see them struggle in ANY WAY that they don't realize they are actually crippling them...Life is FULL OF DISAPPOINTMENTS AND STRUGGLES FOR MOST and that is exactly what I try to teach my own children...
This is an awesome story! I plan on getting the book for sure!
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Wednesday 17 June
By Doug
I must agree with Chantelle to a great degree. We are either rewarded or chastised according to our actions and decisions while on Earth. The "all forgiving God" story is good and true to some degree; however, we are still accountable and have to earn forgiveness. If not, we would all be thieving, murdering whore-mongering, non-productive animals (OK, I won't make a statement about liberals here) with no sense of reward and punishment. Let's not forget the nations and civilizations that God has wiped out for their misdeeds. Serving the Kennedys' legal needs during that era isn't exactly what I call warranting Heavenly reward. Yes, I am a vile and hated "conservative" who believes that we achieve balance through prudent action rather than waiting for an almighty force (Uncle Sam, Nancy Pelosi, God, Pol Pot, etc.) to supply it to us as we wait with our collective hands out. I fervently believe in personal accountability that translates into either reward or punishment and in a totally forgiving creator that forgives according to our sincerity and our attempts at correcting our wrongdoing. To simply say, "well I can do anything I want because God is forgiving" would only infuriate a forgiving God.
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Wednesday 17 June
By Mary Moses
I somewhat agree with your comment however, I don't believe you should have agreed to Chantelles. It's dangerous territory when one believes to "fear" more than to "faith" Or to judge another's experience. Kindness leads to repentence for me. We're not animals that need to be "hit" mentally or physically to learn. Love usually does the trick.
Wednesday 17 June
By Chantelle
You are correct, Doug. The popular view, "It's all about me" belief and concept seems to be to live for the moment and believe what fits my lifestyle instead of what the Word says. None of us will escape our judgment before an all loving God but we WILL be judged according to His Word, not our beliefs.
Wednesday 17 June
By Deanna
Doug, what's all the judging about, how do you know what was in his heart??
Thursday 18 June
By Bill Evans
There are no flying accidents. They are all due to someone's incompetents.I say that after 10,000 hours as a pilot and two accidents both my fault.
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Wednesday 17 June
By Tracey
This makes me want to run out today and buy the book. I am sad that there isnt more of it to read here. I just love these inspirational stories.
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