This is my unpublished skydiving blog post from August 2012,
originally to be titled “Freefalling: A 13,000 Foot Birthday Plunge.” Now that we’re home from our Mexico mission trip (link- photos to come later!) and Banks Lake camping/boating weekend, I
just couldn’t wait any longer to upload this.
Last year’s birthday skydiving weekend was so full of
thrills that I decided to edit this post down AND split it into two parts! Part two should be finished soon, stuffed
with photos, and uploaded here by next weekend. Just for kicks, click here for this year’s low key birthday week. Admittedly, it’s hard
to outdo yourself after you jump out of a plane!
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Skydive Oregon: Bro and sis walk away triumphantly from the drop zone |
Skydiving topped my list of birthday weekend adventures this
year… and we squeezed in A LOT last weekend: rock wall climbing, hiking in the Columbia Gorge, go carts, laser tag, worshipping with our
church family, a party, multiple coffee/lunch/dinner get togethers with friends, a Los Lobos concert, and taking a leap out of an airplane flying above 12,000 feet! By my math, this all added up to one
adrenaline pumping time!
A few months ago, I had assembled a skydiving posse just
large enough to score a group discount: my sister Summer and
me, Andrew and Melissa, and Austin and Emily.
Strangers to each other, they at least knew me and shared my thirst for
thrills (but not necessarily my fear of heights).
Getting Psyched
The day before Austin’s and my birthday, the crew assembled
at Skydive Oregon in Molalla for the big plunge. Kathy,
Lena, and some other friends and family were ready to cheer for us near the
drop zone.
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Andrew, Melissa, Summer, Garth, Emily, and Austin prepare to take the big plunge at Skydive Oregon
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On the ground, our instructor Terry led us
through the motions and answered our questions.
Dang it, flipping out of the plane wouldn’t be allowed. We had already signed a few novella-length
liability waivers which suggested countless ways to usher in an untimely
death/paralysis/dismemberment while skydiving, so what more did we have to lose?
Anticipation
An eternity seemed to pass as we waited for our plane to
swing around to pick us up.
As our group marched across the taxiway to board the plane, a Skydive
Oregon rep intercepted me by the fuselage to break the disappointing news: my video/camera guy wouldn’t be jumping with
me to grab that sweet mid-air footage of my free fall.
A fleeting tinge of disappointment was almost immediately
flushed away as I embraced the bigger picture:
This was about to happen! This
was happening!!
Words cannot express the paralyzing fear that gripped me as
our plane slowly climbed to jumping altitude, between 12,000-13,000 feet. The boarding door was left wide open for a
few minutes, revealing the grassy fields below us as they got smaller and
smaller. Shutting the door subdued the
outside noise but did nothing to erase that terrifying imagery from my
mind. The agonizing anticipation, even
dread, of facing my fear of heights would turn out to be the scariest
part. Little did I know that the worst
was almost behind us.
The moment of truth
Just below 13,000 feet, the boarding door slid open again. The camera person sitting in front of me
disappeared into the light, followed by his seat mate. With Terry and our parachute strapped to my
back, I was next.
We scooted up to the airplane door.
I dangled my feet outside, curled my legs under the plane, and
anticipated Terry’s final instructions.
Shockingly, there were none.
No countdown, no dramatic pause, no moment of soul searching. Only our predetermined “go” signal… a quick
pat on the shoulder. Without a second
of hesitation, we fell away from the plane.
The initial drop was so intense that I forgot I was supposed
to be scared. My stomach leaped into my
throat as gravity yanked us downward.
The cold air pummeled our faces and sucked the air out of my lungs. The sound was deafening.
That early sensation of free falling quickly faded into
weightlessness. The most surprising part
was how not scary it was. At all. Any fear I
would’ve felt was overcome by exhilaration.
Granted, we were still plummeting to Earth at terminal
velocity. Those tiny, grassy fields were
getting bigger and bigger again at an alarmingly quick clip. But it was peaceful, almost euphoric. I never wanted it to end.
Parachutes Away!
Terry deployed our parachute after a couple minutes, bringing
our free fall to a screeching stop. It
almost felt like we were being sucked back up into the sky. We could finally communicate without
screaming, but there was no need for words.
Looking around at the mountains, forests, and fields below left me
speechless. And the view from above was
magnificent.
So how far could I push this? At my request, Terry indulged me in some
light tomfoolery as we drifted toward the ground. He knew the physical limits of our parachute,
and I had absolute trust in his 20+ years of skydive instructor experience. We stayed within the rules, but I jumped at
the chance to get a little more bang for my birthday buck.
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Jumping out of a perfectly good plane: Summer (in the pink parachute) passes up her big brother (I’m just above her, in the yellow) because I just couldn’t resist some mid-air messing around.
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As the ground drew closer, Terry advised me to prepare for a
hard landing. It wasn’t so bad. In fact, our touchdown was much lighter
than the brutal impact I absorbed in Jamaica years ago, while landing my
parasail onto a private boat in Montego Bay.
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I pose ridiculously and brace for impact! |
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My sister Summer, my friends, and I all walked away from the
drop zone that morning with a new appreciation for being alive. I had tackled my fear of heights like never
before, head on.
The other Garth scheduled to jump that day—yes, we met a
random tall guy at Skydive Oregon who only made the cut for this blog because
his name is Garth--had no idea what he was about to get into!
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11 month old Lena and the two Garths |
The after-party begins
Kathy, Lena, and the gang headed back into town for a “what in the name of
Middle Earth did we just do?!” lunch at Jasper’s CafĂ© to decompress, followed
by Austin’s and my obligatory free birthday coffees at Dutch Bros.
Dutch Bros
birthday freebies for Austin and me… with some free pizza (?) inexplicably thrown in for
good measure
Amusingly enough, the barista asked if Austin and I were
non-identical twin brothers. Not so
much. Failing to notice how haggard I must
have looked from my extreme lack of sleep, she then earnestly asked which one
of us was older. Flattered, I was
speechless. Austin is still in his
early-20s.
The smile on my face only got bigger as I drove Austin and Emily home in the Jeep. The rush of
skydiving was even more intense than I could’ve imagined. And my birthday weekend was just getting
started!
Coming this Tuesday on Garth’s Blog…
Our birthday throwback continues--
--with rock wall climbing, hiking, go carting, laser tag, worshipping, dancing, partying, and more!