How Skydiving Changed My Life | Continuing His Story

Published on Monday, May 20, 2024

How Skydiving Changed My Life | Continuing His Story

Pipe smoke chases the lines of a story I’ve heard before.

The 82nd Airborne Division readies to strike in July, 1943, with grandpa taking lead as Jump Commander of the first American Special Forces Unit. He hooks men to static lines and orders their leap into somber Sicilian night skies. The grenades the jumpers held, he adds, were similar in weight to the full can of Hawaiian Punch I sip as an intrigued child, listening. Fruit juicy red mingles with the bite of pipe tobacco every time he tells this story— seeds of a reflective bouquet I carry years later onto the Cessna 208 Caravan at Skydive Moab in Utah.

I wonder if Grandpa’s heart spiked similarly to this post-ground-school anxiety creeping beetles through my stomach. “Relax,” I tell myself. “It’s in your blood. You’re an Airborne legend’s granddaughter, for Christ’s sake!”

Automatic activation device on. Pilot chute cocked and closing pin smiling. Three-ring assemblies stacked like snowmen. Altimeter on. Helmet snug. Good-luck fist bumps, and I’m loaded onto the plane, and my instructor, Dustin, leans forward.

    “Decision altitude?”

    “2,500 feet.”

    “And if there’s no parachute overhead by 1,000 feet?”

    “I’m dead.”

Reassuring instructor s**t.

Yesterday, after ground school and a few beers, I had listened as veterans joked. If his reserve fails, Damion wants to dive headfirst and be crushed like a Keystone can. Ash plans to strip naked and feel air rattle her piercings; maybe shock her fundamentalist grandparents out of their graves when her demon dragon tat is found.

The plane continues to climb in its zig-zag pattern to 2.5 miles above the planet. More interrogation: Pointer finger: “Pull.” Loose hand: “Relax.” And so on.

Instructor Dustin slides his fingers over my palm before delivering another fist bump. “You ready to skydive?” I nod and feign confidence. The red and then green lights drill my pupils.

 “It’s go time.”

I cling to the bar like it’s the edge of a boiling pot, and then with one step, I’m a leaf. I’m skydiving. 

My first breath, and I’m face-flopping like a dog out of a car window, the horizon shifting while I’m 120 miles per hour toward the earth. Wave off, 4,500 feet, pull! Death cheated.

Grandpa’s ghost dips his brush in Hawaiian Punch red and paints clouds of pink smoke for me. He wipes away my fear with wind and whispers, “Not so bad for a girl.”

The first time I saw my parachute bloom, I saw my grandpa and I met myself.

Jennifer Smith | A-109720
Draper, Utah

Comments (0)Number of views (7654)
Print

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
 

 

 
Photo by Anthony Armendariz

James Drummond focuses on the scoring disc while on his way to winning the national championship in accuracy landing at the USPA Nationals at Skydive Chicago in Ottawa, Illinois.

SDEgypt

 

Peregrine

Skyjacker—The Richard McCoy Jr. Story
Features | Mar 12, 2011

Skyjacker—The Richard McCoy Jr. Story

Safety Check | Wings in Water
Safety Check | Sep 01, 2010

Safety Check | Wings in Water

Thursday, July 1, 2010

Peregrine

Saturday, May 1, 2010

A Low-Cost Life Saver
Ask A Rigger | Jan 02, 2010

A Low-Cost Life Saver

Profiles: Carolyn Clay
Profiles | Dec 01, 2000

Profiles: Carolyn Clay

Peregrine

Operation Second Look
Features | May 01, 1997

Operation Second Look

24-Man Superstar
Features | Apr 01, 1972

24-Man Superstar

Our Very Own Eight-Man Star
Features | Oct 01, 1969

Our Very Own Eight-Man Star

The U.S. Army Parachute Team
Features | Jul 01, 1969

The U.S. Army Parachute Team

Peregrine

First145146147148149150151153