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Iowa Falls High School Class of 1969
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| Iowa Falls High School Class of 1969
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Before
you get impressed, thinking I had the courage to jump out of a perfectly good
airplane, let me explain…
I
had to have been 8 or 9 years old and I had just finished watching a John Wayne
movie where parachuting was a main aspect of the movie. Now,
I was an imaginative child and I just had to find a way to emulate my hero, John
Wayne. I lived on a farm and not far
from the farm house was a very tall windmill. Now
the one thing I knew was that, in order to parachute, one had to jump from some
height. So I determined that the
windmill was going to be my platform.
Now
for the parachute... Well, in the
movies they are big and white and wide, and what was on the farm that I could
use for my chute? A sheet … that
is, a double sheet. A single sheet
would never do. A double sheet would
work quite nicely. Now, how do you
attach a sheet to your body? I
concluded that heavy-duty strong string should do the trick.
I
manufactured my parachute, complete with my heavy-duty string tied to each
corner, and the string then attached to me. I
climbed the windmill. I thought that
the very top was a bit high to try an untested chute, so I climbed about half
way up and jumped. This is where I
began to learn some life lessons…
Life
lesson number one: heavy-duty string
tied to the corners of a sheet doesn’t work so well for a parachute!! The
string came off my chute.
Life
lesson number two: survey the area
below the platform before jumping. It
seems I jumped on the side of the windmill that had a fence. I
landed on the fence, gashing a pretty good hole in my arm (a scar I carry to
this day). After getting patched and
stitched and consoled, and, as I recall, yelled at after my folks determined I
was going to live, I redesigned my chute. I
allowed as how since the string didn’t work tied to the chute I would use
twine (much heavier) and put it through the sheet at the corners.
I
climbed a bit higher for the second jump. Having
learned life lesson number 2 from the first jump (“look before you leap”), I
went to the other side of the windmill.
I
jumped.
I
immediately began to learn some additional life lessons:
twine didn’t work either, design didn’t work (as the sheet ripped),
and the little shed at the bottom of the windmill was wider than it appeared. I
didn’t hit the fence, but did manage to rip out all of my stitches when I hit
the roof of the shed.
The
big life lesson I learned: let John
Wayne jump out of airplanes. I
decided to play “soldier” on the ground.
After
my parachuting accident it was several years before gravity and I had another
encounter with heights...and, well, that’s another story...
©2006 RALLENHILL
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