How Skydiving Changed My Life | Sharing the Love

Ed Lightle

I remember those days like they were yesterday. It was the summer of 1982, and Dan B.C. [Brodsky-Chenfeld], Pat Stallard, Mark Badillo and I were launching seemingly effortless 4-way exits from a Cessna 180 at Greene County Sport Parachute Center in Xenia, Ohio. I can still see the hushed excitement on our faces as we transitioned on the hill and consistently turned 10 to 11 points from 9,500 feet.

Pat had a way of making everything seem so relaxed and controlled, and Mark and Dan were two of the nicest skydivers I had ever met. (Of course, what can I say about Dan that is not already the stuff of legends?) As for me, I was already obsessed with 4-way, and jumping with these guys only made my obsession more intense.

For whatever reason, 4-way spoke to me. I liked the discipline and teamwork required. I liked how we could engineer formations to make our moves more efficient, allowing us to turn more points. I especially liked the camaraderie that was naturally developing among this group of talented jumpers. We would have made a great team.

But I had already been jumping hard for 10 years and my priorities were suddenly changing. I was in the middle of graduate school and couldn’t really afford hundreds of team jumps. Plus, settling down and raising a family were taking shape in my mind. Maybe the fact that I was almost 10 years older than everybody else had something to do with it. So, in 1983, I quit jumping for 15 years. I told myself that if I couldn’t train with Dan, I wasn’t going to jump at all.

Fast forward to 1998, and I got the urge to get back in the air. I was still obsessed with 4-way, but now I had a wife and kids, and they remained my top priority—so training with a serious team was out of the question. I did manage to head up several fun teams over the years, but more important, I found that I really enjoyed introducing newer jumpers to 4-way. If I couldn’t train seriously with a team, this was the next best thing. I had found my new calling.

So for the past several years, I have been sharing my love of 4-way with both newer and experienced skydivers. It’s rewarding to see the excitement on their faces after we’ve launched a successful exit and turned several points, and even more rewarding when they come up to me and ask me to do more 4-way jumps with them. And I occasionally feel a lump of pride in my throat when I see jumpers go on to form their own teams and continue to spread the 4-way love. Of course, there’s one more reason I love organizing 4-way jumps—it helps me keep my own head in the game.

Ed Lightle | D-5966
Columbus, Ohio

Innhopps

Rate this article:
3.0
Print

Number of views (2121)/Comments (0)

Leave a comment

This form collects your name, email, IP address and content so that we can keep track of the comments placed on the website. For more info check our Privacy Policy and Terms Of Use where you will get more info on where, how and why we store your data.
Add comment