Senior Skydiving Life Is Short Jump At It
My wife, Carolyn, and I are three miles up, falling, tumbling, soaring
through space at 174 feet per second - 120 mph or "terminal
velocity" - and all I can think of is: "Wow! I'm flying. I should
have worn a jacket."
The
rushing winds press through us, cold, dizzying, exhilarating.
Carolyn shouts to me, "A fine mess you've gotten us into, Ollie!"
Carolyn Kaiser, foxy senior citizen, at 15,000 feet, jumping from
a perfectly good airplane.>>>>
Below lie the vast Atlantic Ocean, the Indian River, and the Kennedy
Space Center. All of Florida's splendid and beautiful Brevard County
is my panorama.
Spread-eagled in free fall, the wind paints a huge smile on my face.
My senses are way past overload. I'm concerned that they'll
completely shut down from this pure raw ecstasy.
At 5,000 feet, a sudden whoosh, a pop really, as the rainbow-colored
chute unfurls. My legs swing out in front of me as I'm yanked toward
the sun. My tethered partner and new best friend, an Aussie lass
with 4,500 jumps to her credit, hands me the steering lines.
It's quiet now, the rush gone. Drifting, drifting in a silent blue
universe; it is sublime freedom.
As I pull left, then right on our lazy decent back to the airport, I
watch Carolyn landing below, effortlessly, as if stepping from a low
stair. As always, the gutsy lady passed me by somewhere along the
way.
Suddenly Trivia: What is the ratio of skydiving jumps to
deaths, according to FAI/IPC: a) 1:10,555, b) 1:26,968 c)
1:64,091, d) 1:93,002
Longtime readers of this column will not ask why we jumped from a
perfectly good airplane. They already know that Carolyn and I take
to the air as an annual rite. We have experienced fixed-wing,
bi-wing, short-wing (stunt), helicopter, even gliders, on our
explorations.
Just last year, following a hot-air balloon trip over south Florida,
I wrote: "On our next excursion to the sky, we're skydiving. Neither
of us fears dying. At our ages, boredom and stagnation are the
killers that concern us most." See I Wish I'd Been This Young When I
was 20 at
http://www.suddenlysenior.com/ballooning.html.
Those of us who are Suddenly Senior enjoy many advantages, including
never having to prove anything to anybody. We can set the kid inside
us free. Fearless, joyful, we can experience life's vast universe
and all its miracles.
Don't Come Crying to Us!
Had apprehension reared its ugly head, it would have occurred at
Titusville's Skydive Space Center's office -
"HOME OF FLORIDA'S HIGHEST JUMPS - 18,000 feet!"
There we signed and initialed 19 times a legal document entitled
"WARNING! WARNING! WARNING!" This 9-page caution graphically
explains that parachuting activities are inherently dangerous and
one can be seriously injured or killed while participating in this
sport. Summed up it states: "Don't you or your heirs come crying to
us if the worst happens."
Carolyn and I learned long ago learned that it's the things you
don't do that you'll later regret.
Case in point: My Skydive Center* Certificate of Completion
says, "Frank has accomplished what only a handful dare to dream and
what only the elite few successfully complete. To Frank will go the
knowledge, confidence, and esteem which only the privileged enjoy!"
Try getting that from your four-day Caribbean cruise.
Life is short and getting shorter. Live it to the fullest. I
guarantee you'll never feel more alive than while plummeting to
earth at two miles a minute.
Suddenly Trivia Answer: c) 1:64,091. In a recent year, 29
died from skydiving accidents, over 140 died scuba diving, 856
bicycling, over 7,000 drowned, 1,154 died of bee stings, and 80
by lightning; 43,990 were killed in highway accidents. There
were 1,171 boating fatalities, 235 airline deaths, and 1,164
fatalities in light aircraft general aviation accidents.
However, if at first you don't succeed, skydiving is not for
you.
*Cost of a Tandem Skydive at the Skydive Space Center is $159.95.
Video package with still photography is an additional $89.95. Call
1-800-823-0016.
CLICK HERE
for the closest skydive center near you.
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