Posted on 05/07/2026 2:50:34 PM PDT by Ronaldus Magnus III
There’s nothing like a near-death experience to clear the head. In 1988, I decided to do a parachute jump. I was young, it sounded fun, and it was for charity, so I signed up and pestered people to sponsor me for an HIV charity, which was a cause very much in the news at the time.
(Excerpt) Read more at telegraph.co.uk ...
Dad used to say that there are two kinds of people that jump out of airplanes: Idiots, and people in the Armed Services. Yes, yes, dad had to master parachute jumping, but if he still had wings on his plane, he tried to land it.
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Death doesn’t scare me at my age. I’ll try it if it was free.
I don’t jump out of an airplane as long as it has wings and a tail. I also don’t fly helicopters. I have license to fly both, as well as a seaplane rating.
People used to call me an idiot for Hang gliding, which I did for several years. Also thought i was an idiot for riding motorcycles. Smart people use good judgment and manage the risk to keep themselves safe. Skydiving is no different. I never had an injury accident in either hang gliding or motorcycles, and I really had a great time!!!!
Risky enough behavior in 1988 without jumping out of an airplane.
Tou have a brave strong dad. Good for you—and the rest of us to.
My friend was a parachuter in the Army. met him when we were neighbors in LA. He took me out with him when was leaping out of planes “for fun”. I had to wear a parachute and know how to use it in case I fell out.
Best I could do was watch out the door as he jumped out. NO WAY I’d ever do that. But the peole who did, amost all men, thought it was fun.
My friend was a dentist. I’’d never want to be one of those either. I’m just a squeamish “girl”. And proud of it. Am living longer than all those old friends and most of the new ones.
I’ve done two tandem jumps with two of my kids. One of my others has done it as has my son in law.
I had the same instructor both times. He’s done 4000 tandem jumps. I kinda guess he’s got it figured out.
The first half second after you depart the plane is sheer terror, then it goes to super cool.
Shortly after I got my pilot’s license I took a fellow who was an ex-paratrooper for a ride. Kept telling me he’d love to jump out of the plane. I think he was serious.
There is a certain amount of fun in jumping from various planes and various helicopters, and in different terrain, storms, and at night.
Twenty-five thousand moving parts, all conspiring to kill you. I did ~two hours in an R-22 after I got my PPL, just to see what flying a helicopter was all about. It was fun, but I never pursued it further.
As for jumping out of a perfectly good airplane... that's a higher form of insanity.
Thanks!
How do you feel about broken bones?
My bil did that for a living for a while in The Marine Corps.
I don’t like them.
I fly jump planes on the weekends. Never ever a problem.
There is absolutely NO REASON to jump out of a perfectly good airplane.
It seems that once the sport got safe gear and events, people had to test the sport for thrills. I heard that they are experimenting with how to land in a wingsuit—one wants to swoop up the cliff of a canyon and zero out his speed at the canyon’s top edge.
I’ve seen more than my share of bad jumps and a couple of frapps.
Sky diving isn’t for everyone. I instructed for several years and rode the aircraft down with the student a couple of times because they decided not to go.
I’m old school - started on rounds and I have 500+ jumps, one malfunction with the new airfoil (square) canopies, and was in the first 8-man star in Germany. I would not trade my experiences with anybody else. It is an intense sport with intense people.
For a woman, I’m a bit of an odd duck- go cart ~5 years old, dirt bike at 12, street bike and hang gliding at 18, pilot’s license at 34, skydiving and skysurfing at 40, B.A.S.E. number holder, and the only thing I’d never do again or advise- bungee jumping. My babysitter wanted to go, and I consented to do it with her. It can cause a lot of body trauma. What I’d think twice about- hang gliding. It wasn’t fun crashing into the sand dune multiple times while learning, and I never did it again after being licensed. As a pilot, I figured it was a good idea to know how to bail out safely, and skydiving had been a dream since Gypsy Moths’ release in theatres. As Christian, I considered skydiving a true “leap of faith.” I’d much rather jump than trust a pilot to land, esp. after being married to a career 727 captain. A crew member asked him why he drank so heavily before dead heading. “I know who does the maintenance!”
“For to me, to live is Christ, and to die is gain” Philippians
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