I leapt off the tallest point of the overpass in Salisbury in 1983. It is only about 30ft high and I more lowered myself by my arms and then dropped and rolled out of the fall onto the footpath below. Much to the surprise of many passing pedestrians.
Why? I can't remember. I had trained to do a parachute jump for charity and I was a very agile person. I think I had something to prove, you see I actually bottled out of the parachute jump and went around collecting the sponsorhip anyway. Everybody paid up so that's okay. Anyway, I was in a hurry and this was a really good short cut. And in a rash moment I lowered myself over the side and dropped.
I broke a bone in my foot. But I didn't get it seen to until the following day, so I did save myself some time and got to wherever I was going.
I was hit by lightening in 1992. Well actually, the building was struck by lightening, I was leaning against the lightening rod smoking a cigarette. Luckily it was a "spider system" dispersing the lightening in many different directions and acting like a giant fuse. The fuse in the bit I was on burnt out before I did. However, it bloody hurt and there were side effects.
In 1976, on my 12th birthday I picked up a brass lamp and somehow as I moved it, the case became live. I didn't jump. I was paralysed, every muscle in my body was paralysed except my brain.
My heart was paralysed, it literally stopped and that really hurt. Every muscle in my body pulled at maximum force locking me totally rigid. And all the while I was thinking and I thought I was gonna die. And I thought this is a silly way to die.
Luckily my cousin unplugged the lamp. Now that made me jump. Every muscle in my body spasmed and I was thrown across the room and I lived to go to hospital and have all the skin that had burnt off my hand replaced with skin from my arse. I can kiss my own arse cheeks now. The bones in my fingers healed bent.
While I was in hospital there was a girl of about 7 there who had done the same thing with the same kind of lamp, but she had jumped. In fact the cheeks of her buttocks had clenched so tightly she had hit the ceiling from a sitting position and cracked her skull so she had burns and head injury.
Now this bit is dedicated to Dr Eric. You'll love this:
In 1998 (when I was old and ugly enough to know better) I got onto a pair of wooden 4ft pegs. I realised that wasn't wearing my knee pads and decided that I couldn't be bothered to get down, go back to the van and all that. So I carried on. Well, later on I tripped on something, and not wearing pads I decided I didn't want to fall so I tried to fight the fall. I tried to run out of the topple and straighten up.
Actually all I did was make the fall worse. I was hell bent on not landing on my knees and fell forwards, while sprinting (I was 9ft 10 high) and fell onto my wrists, which gave way really feebly and my jaw hit the concrete, and I felt it click as it dislocated.
Stunned I lay on the floor as horrified onlookers rushed around. A woman kept stroking my head and I could see a pool of blood which I knew was coming from my ears. I could move my lips, but not my jaw so I could speak like a bad ventriloquist. So I waved and smiled to the distressed kids and got someone to pass around my blood stained hat.
All the kids got to see a real ambulance as they came and cut away my stilt trousers put me on a stretcher and carted me off.
Now if you think a dislocated jaw is painful, that's nothing compared to having a physiotherapist put it back into it's place. This happens a couple of hours afterwards, just as your bodies natural endorphines and pain killers are wearing off and spent. It's not as quick, and it is very painful.
So there you go Dr Eric. I have tried to fulfill your wishes, but I'm still here.
Why? I can't remember. I had trained to do a parachute jump for charity and I was a very agile person. I think I had something to prove, you see I actually bottled out of the parachute jump and went around collecting the sponsorhip anyway. Everybody paid up so that's okay. Anyway, I was in a hurry and this was a really good short cut. And in a rash moment I lowered myself over the side and dropped.
I broke a bone in my foot. But I didn't get it seen to until the following day, so I did save myself some time and got to wherever I was going.
I was hit by lightening in 1992. Well actually, the building was struck by lightening, I was leaning against the lightening rod smoking a cigarette. Luckily it was a "spider system" dispersing the lightening in many different directions and acting like a giant fuse. The fuse in the bit I was on burnt out before I did. However, it bloody hurt and there were side effects.
In 1976, on my 12th birthday I picked up a brass lamp and somehow as I moved it, the case became live. I didn't jump. I was paralysed, every muscle in my body was paralysed except my brain.
My heart was paralysed, it literally stopped and that really hurt. Every muscle in my body pulled at maximum force locking me totally rigid. And all the while I was thinking and I thought I was gonna die. And I thought this is a silly way to die.
Luckily my cousin unplugged the lamp. Now that made me jump. Every muscle in my body spasmed and I was thrown across the room and I lived to go to hospital and have all the skin that had burnt off my hand replaced with skin from my arse. I can kiss my own arse cheeks now. The bones in my fingers healed bent.
While I was in hospital there was a girl of about 7 there who had done the same thing with the same kind of lamp, but she had jumped. In fact the cheeks of her buttocks had clenched so tightly she had hit the ceiling from a sitting position and cracked her skull so she had burns and head injury.
Now this bit is dedicated to Dr Eric. You'll love this:
In 1998 (when I was old and ugly enough to know better) I got onto a pair of wooden 4ft pegs. I realised that wasn't wearing my knee pads and decided that I couldn't be bothered to get down, go back to the van and all that. So I carried on. Well, later on I tripped on something, and not wearing pads I decided I didn't want to fall so I tried to fight the fall. I tried to run out of the topple and straighten up.
Actually all I did was make the fall worse. I was hell bent on not landing on my knees and fell forwards, while sprinting (I was 9ft 10 high) and fell onto my wrists, which gave way really feebly and my jaw hit the concrete, and I felt it click as it dislocated.
Stunned I lay on the floor as horrified onlookers rushed around. A woman kept stroking my head and I could see a pool of blood which I knew was coming from my ears. I could move my lips, but not my jaw so I could speak like a bad ventriloquist. So I waved and smiled to the distressed kids and got someone to pass around my blood stained hat.
All the kids got to see a real ambulance as they came and cut away my stilt trousers put me on a stretcher and carted me off.
Now if you think a dislocated jaw is painful, that's nothing compared to having a physiotherapist put it back into it's place. This happens a couple of hours afterwards, just as your bodies natural endorphines and pain killers are wearing off and spent. It's not as quick, and it is very painful.
So there you go Dr Eric. I have tried to fulfill your wishes, but I'm still here.

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