Last Saturday, as the sun skipped and sparkled off Lake
Huron and the evening shadows lengthened, ten skydivers
jumped from two aircraft flying high over Grand Bend,
Ontario. I was one of them.
We jumped, all ten of us, knowing that four Canadian
skydivers had died earlier that day in two separate
incidents, when parachutes tangled or did not open or opened
too late. Two of the dead men were our friends. Still, we
marveled at the view, hooted at our freedom and exulted in
our success. It was my 400th jump, and I will remember it
fondly as a happy event.
That night we talked, sometimes awkwardly, about our dead
companions. Some of us cried. But there was also much
laughter. And the next day, we jumped again.
And today and yesterday and all this week, to friends and
family and co-workers, I have tried to explain why. Why do
I jump out of airplanes? Why did I jump after hearing of
the sudden deaths of my fellow skydivers? And why will I
jump again?
I hear myself saying things like, "We all know the
risks." Or, "Jumping out of an airplane is safer than
driving down the highway." And, "When someone dies in a car
crash, do you stop driving?"
But I know these answers aren't good enough. They are
banal cliches made hollow by the fact of four broken bodies
lying lifeless. As a skydiver, I must justify my
participation in a sport that each year kills some of its
participants. I must try to answer "Why?"
I first jumped from an airplane in 1975 when I was 18
years old. I did it because it looked daring and exciting
and, perhaps, because I was neither daring nor exciting and
I hoped this sport would make me so. But it did not. At
first, it just made me scared.
I flailed and tumbled in freefall, stiff as a board and
white with fear. Once, in panicked confusion, I steered my
parachute into a tree. And though I spent lots of time and
money, it seemed I would never master this sport.
But I kept jumping -- four jumps one year, five the next,
11 the following summer. And slowly, sometimes painfully, I
started learning things - - how to fall controlled and
stable, how to pick an exit point and land on target. How
to turn and flip in freefall, how to move forward and back
and up and down toward other jumpers in the sky. How to
think and relax under stressful conditions.
And how to fly.
And I have continued learning. The skills are different
now -- how to launch a four person formation from the step
of a Cessna, or exit from a DC-3. How to dive straight down
at 150 miles an hour, then use my body to brake and swoop
and softly touch the arm of a friend.
And although these acts are uniquely thrilling and have
given me pure moments of joy, I do not study them for their
own sake. No, I study them because they teach me how to
live.
Like many people, I am good at wearing masks and adopting
attitudes to hide and shield my true self. But when the
door opens at 10,000 feet, there is nowhere to hide.
Like many people, I am good at conveniently forgetting
that myself, and all the people I know and love, must
eventually perish. Jumping has taught me to fight and fear
death, and to never forget that it's there. Like many
people, I am good at concentrating on the mindless details
that pass for normal -- like watching TV and getting the
brakes fixed on my car. But when I jump, I forget all those
endless inconsequentials. Instead I concentrate on the
moment, and I remember how to live.
When I choose to step from an aircraft and then, 45
seconds later, to open my parachute, I control my destiny --
an opportunity often lacking in a 9-to-5 existence, and
missing in a life forever threatened by disease or sudden
highway death.
Skydiving has taught me that confronting fear (and I am
always afraid before I jump) and risk is always important.
Not only physical risk, with its rewarding shot of
adrenalin, but also the importance of taking chances with
the heart -- of risking friendship, love and laughter.
Though that weekend's tragedies flood me with remorse,
they do not fill me with regret. Though I mourn the loss of
my skydiving companions, I will not stop celebrating life.
Next weekend, I will try to keep learning. And I will
jump again.
(this was written about 4
years ago, so there aren't any new Canadian
deaths)
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