Follow
the breadcrumbs back from the metaphor to the physical reality.
Whether the chicken or the egg came first is irrelevant – the idea
and the truth are linked together, so that I've never believed it's
hitting the ground that scares people. It's the idea of falling, of
succumbing to whatever may be.
When I jumped with a bungy strapped around my ankles, I fell through a gorge
for 7 seconds, body totally at the whim of gravity. And it was a rush
unlike anything I'd experienced before, a surefire way to get over
the fear of falling. But it's all a bit of a blur of adrenaline and
whizzing colours – to face falling head on, you need to go higher.
The 134 m platform suspended over the Nevis Gorge is a dot, looking
down from a tiny plane some 3,600 m in the air. That's 12,000 feet,
3.6 km – and, strapped onto some dude who's holding the ripcord of
a parachute, it's 45 seconds of falling in a suspended moment of
reality that rushes by at 200 km an hour.
It was
a deadly Wednesday afternoon that I filled the tank of my borrowed
Corolla, bought a new pair of sunglasses (the almost-definitely
counterfeit shades I picked up from a stall in southern Spain went
missing last week, after serving me well on both ends of this earth),
grabbed Elton, Alanis, and The 4 of Us, and set off through Arthur's Pass, back to the West Coast. Destination: that bushplane zooming
above Fox Glacier.
The trip through the mountains took a few hours – the peaks and valleys had a fresh new coating of snow since the last time I drove the scenic route, so that even when the road crews stopped you on a narrow winding road up a mountainside, you had plenty to gawk at.
By the time I made it to the junction flanking the Tasman Sea, the sky was the colour of a lullaby and the fading light caught whisps of woodsmoke. I drove south longer than I'd planned, looking for a place to set up camp for the nigh. Through Hokitika, the historic goldtown of Ross, and finally to a patch of gravel alongside Lake Ianthe, where I reclined the seat and opened up my sleeping bag.
In no
way is sleeping in a car comfortable. Truth be told, it's
excruciating – I've got a Top 5 Worst Sleeps list, and this one
doesn't quite rank up, but deserves honourable mention. But these
kind of shenanigans are kind of part of it. Remember in “Blaze of
Glory” where Jon Bon Jovi plays his guitar on a cliff in the desert
and says he's “got an old coat for a pillow, and the earth is last
night's bed,” and you dully accept the fact that you'll probably
never, ever be that
cool? Yeah, that always bugged me, too.
I was
up and on the go by 7:00 the next morning, rearranging my cramped
quarters by getting all the seats vertical again. There was a light
morning mist settled over the water and the shallow dips in the land,
and as I drove the rest of the way to Fox Glacier, the sun burst to
brilliant life and cleared all the haze out of the air. I stopped in
Franz Josef for pancakes and coffee, and by the time I pulled into
Fox Glacier (don't blink or you'll drive right through it), the sky
was as clear as a baby's complexion.
I
almost feel bad. The West Coast of New Zealand is notorious for rain,
the leafy green trees a testament to the fact that this really is one
of the wettest places on earth. The day I drove through Fox Glacier,
northbound from Queenstown, I had picked up a hitchhiker who was
skydiving from Fox Glacier. I remember being tempted to go up in the
plane with her, because the cards were aligned in a way I could never
imagine happening again: being alongside the view of views, the sun
the only thing in the big blue sky. I figured I had let the
opportunity completely slip through my fingers, but sure enough, a
month later, I'm back there again and lightning strikes twice.
Actually, this time might have been even better – it's winter now,
and Mt. Cook and the surrounding summits look a lot frostier now.
How
was I feeling? The night before I did my bungy jump, I was a bit
jittery, because I could visualize that height and that gut feeling,
standing on the edge looking down. This time, I couldn't – I really
believed that the free fall from a plane was more about a thrilling
experience than about overcoming a fear. I had been looking forward
to skydiving, way back when I was in my bedroom on Freshwater Road in
St. John's, so this morning had that surreal feeling of something
significant finally happening. You build it up in your mind so that
you can't believe it actually exists outside of an idea in your head
– I wouldn't have wanted to do this jump anywhere else on earth, on
any other day. It was supposed to be that Thursday in June.
So, I
wasn't nervous. I was really, legitimately excited.
Fox Glacier Skydive has been doing this up-and-down racket since 1997
from a tiny airstrip in the heart of the village (again, don't blink,
or you'll drive right by it). When I checked in, two French guys were
already wearing their red one-piece jumpsuits and helmets that would
cover your ears from the slices razors of the wind but probably
wouldn't be a lifesaver if your parachute didn't deploy. The tiny
plane can take seven people up in the air (that includes the pilot
and the instructors, who ride tandem), so we had a full load.
As I
wriggled into the jumpsuit and then the harness, I met Ben, the
ex-army parachutist whose hands I was putting my life into. Don't
piss off the guy who opens the parachute – you don't want him to
decide halfway down that he's looking for a major career change. The
skydive is tandem, so you're good and strapped into someone who knows
what they're doing, right from when you get in the back of the plane
and sit on their lap.
After
a safety briefing explaining the way to shape your body like a banana
during the plummet to earth, the propellers were churning and we were
off, down the runway and up in the sky.
I
think it was somewhere around 6,000 feet, climbing alongside the
massive, snowy peak of Aoraki/Mount Cook (in the company of its
nearly-as-high friends) and looking down on the grey ribbon flowing
from the Fox Glacier into the the arc of the Tasman Sea, that I
remembered all the times people had told me bungy jumping was much
scarier than skydiving, because the depth of the bungy is an obvious
safety threat, whereas when you're in a plane your brain doesn't see
the things you're looking at as real. I saw all those relaxed faces
in my mind as a blur, and was left with another thought: what a crock
of absolute horseshit that was.
In what universe is jumping from a moving aircraft 12,000 feet above solid earth not a big deal?!
In what universe is jumping from a moving aircraft 12,000 feet above solid earth not a big deal?!
And still we made
our ascent. True, the panorama didn't look like something I could
reach out and touch, but when the door slid open a few inches from my
face and the wind billowed in, almost beckoning us forward, I wasn't
so sure this was a great idea anymore. And then, we shuffled to the
edge, and my feet were dangling above the ground a long way down.
Smile for the wing camera? I think I'd rather contort it in terror as
my arms flail about, looking for something, anything, to grab
onto and stop this madness before we . . .
And we're falling. Watch out below.
Plunging, head and feet tilted back, hands clasping my shoulder straps. The world is whizzing by, the mountains and land and ocean tumbling over each other as we spiral haphazardly. And then, something unexpected happens. I'm ok with this – this is a 45 second freefall, which means that it doesn't stay a blur. You start having unmuddled, rational thoughts – that really is a beautiful view of the Alps, this really is falling, my mouth really is unimaginably dry because of that frigging wind.
When I flew into Los Angeles some five months ago, I watched The Perks of Being a Wallflower on the flight across North America. I've been looking for a way to incorporate that closing quote into this story since that day, because it felt so relevant to what I was doing. At no point, however, did it make as much sense as I did when I was falling through the sky above Fox Glacier:
“You have to do things. I'm going to do what I want to do. I'm going to be who I really am. And I'm going to figure out what that is. And we could all sit around and wonder and feel bad about each other and blame a lot of people for what they did or didn't do or what they didn't know. I don't know. I guess there could always be someone to blame. It's just different. Maybe it's good to put things in perspective, but sometimes, I think that the only perspective is to really be there. Because it's okay to feel things. I was really there. And that was enough to make me feel infinite. I feel infinite.”
This is amazing.
I guess it took 45 seconds before the I heard the whooomp of the parachute opening up above our heads, and our hurtle towards the ground abruptly halted and the inverted dive switched to an upright floating – I guess it took that long, but it felt both longer and shorter all at once. All I could do was catch my breath, shake Ben's hand, and say, in all sincerity, “Thank you for not killing us.”
“We're not landed yet!”
“Do what you think you're supposed to do!”
Oh no Ben, the guy down at the airstrip said you'd tell us how to do this! Ben you idiot, you're going to get us both killed, or swept over to Australia, or both!
Pull the handle to the right, the parachute veers right. Pull it left, it goes left. I guess it wasn't so hard after all – not that I'd want to try landing on the empty patch of grass near the bright red marker, still just a faint mark on the ground. I'll leave that to someone who knows what they're doing. At one point, we let go of the left handle and hauled the right as far as it would go, causing the whole parachute to start twirling to the right, and fast. Look straight down as you do it, at the copses and cows, and try not to get a headrush of vertigo.
It was getting on late afternoon as I drove past Greymouth, up towards Paparoa National Park. When Olivia and I drove up the West Coast last month, from Haast to Kumara Junction, the road went through some amazing rainforests, but I remember saying, “Didn't you think we'd see more of, y'know, the coast?” We were never particularly far from the Tasman Sea, but still only caught a few glimpses before we turned into Arthur's Pass – north of Greymouth, though, that's the kind of area I envisioned when I thought of the West Coast. The lush forests are there, but they're on steep hillsides that literally meet the rocky edge of the ocean just down from the road. In one glimpse, you're seeing more things than your eyes can focus on at one time.
And even though it didn't rain, the clouds were starting to get a bit heavier up here. This felt more like a West Coast experience.
Driving through Punakaiki, there's not a lot to the community, beyond a few houses, roadside cafe, and an i-SITE. It's the mysterious geological feature just a short walk through the vibrant green forest that brings in the tourists: this is where the Pancake Rocks rear their heads as distinct limestone columns in the ocean.
Picture layer upon layer of pancakes. That's pretty much what you're dealing with here – hard and soft layers of stuff, under immense pressure over millions of years, built up this totally unique place. And it's not just one or two columns, it's hundreds, interspersed with sea caverns and blowholes of salty ocean spray. It's a twenty minute walk along the headland, where the Pancake Rocks are concentrated at the very edge of the mighty Tasman.
I went up in a plane, jumped, and walked away from it, and I felt like I did something important, something that the last year of my life has, in some way or another, been building towards. I guess I knew it was going to happen eventually, but I don't know if I ever really believed I was capable of doing it until we were perched on the edge of the plane, looking down at what lay below. And, just like the bungy, there's never going to be a time, from here on, where I haven't done this. Nothing can take this experience from me. All of these things were going through my body and soul, and it wasn't long that all I wanted to do was give in to exhaustion and sweet dreams.
If I had to go home tomorrow, I'd feel like I had the trip I wanted to have in New Zealand. That's a pretty swelling feeling of self-fulfilment, if you'll indulge me for just a moment and allow the gravity of that to sink in. And the best part is I'm not going home tomorrow – I'm going into Christchurch to sit in the audience as His Holiness the Dalai Lama discusses compassion. Deadly. Who would have ever guessed that this massive fall out of the ordinary would be such a dizzying rush of clarity? I might be back to earth, but I'm still steadily tumbling down the Rabbit's Hole.
Cheers,
rb
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