How Skydiving Changed My Life
Menu
  1. First-Time & Student Skydivers
  2. Experienced Skydivers
  3. Rating Holders and S&TAs
  4. Drop Zone Management
  5. About USPA
Wednesday, April 24, 2024
How Skydiving Changed My Life

How Skydiving Changed My Life

by Lisa Ann Simpson

How Skydiving Changed My Life
Sunday, November 1, 2015

by Lisa Ann Simpson | C-41459 | Ithaca, New York

When I started skydiving, it was the first thing I had actually done just for me. In 1997, I made one tandem for my 30th birthday. I fell in love with skydiving, but I was a single mother of two children and my most important goal was to raise them. Almost 15 years later, I told a girlfriend at work who was a skydiver that I had once made a tandem and would love to do another one. She told me that she had a friend who took students on tandems and gave me his contact information. On November 13, 2010, I drove to Skydive City Zephyrhills in Florida. I had no idea that my life was going to change forever.

When I made my tandem, it was just as wonderful as I remembered. My tandem instructor, Cris Fucci, asked me how I liked it, and I said, “I love it, I wish I could do it myself.” He responded, “You can; I can teach you.” But I didn’t believe that I could actually do it. I lacked confidence and had never been involved in a sport in my entire life.

I then said, “I have three questions. One: Am I too old?”

He said no.

“Two: Do I have to get into shape?”

He said that it would help.

“And three: Do I have to learn north, east, south and west?”

It took him a few minutes to answer that one, but he said that I could get around it to begin with!

Of course, there were other factors, as well. First, I have been a registered nurse for 20 years and worked for more than 10 years in the emergency department. The nurses and doctors I worked with told me that I had a death wish. I was also afraid that I would be physically unable to skydive due to injuries from a car accident, in which I lost my uncle. I was the lucky one who lived, but I fractured my L5 vertebrae and my left arm in two places. My arm was repaired with seven screws and a plate, but I had radial-nerve neuropathy in my right arm from overcompensating.

I was honestly petrified to jump, but the thought of not doing it scared me even more. So I showed up for AFF and had two wonderful instructors: Fucci, who had been my tandem instructor, and Kirk Knight, who was once commander of the U.S. Army Golden Knights. It was a long day, but I couldn’t wait to get in the air. That day—December 3, 2011—I made my first AFF jump, and I still mark it on the calendar as the best day of my life. It was the day that I learned how to truly live.

I gained an amazing feeling of freedom and confidence. It was also amazing how much skydiving affected the rest of my life. Things I may have feared in the past somehow weren’t that significant anymore. And I started to look forward to the time it gave me, time that was all mine. Skydiving was all about me. When I got in the air, I wasn’t a nurse, a mom, a grandmom; all my worries were gone, and I had nothing on my mind but saving my life and enjoying it.

In June, I celebrated my 300th jump. I still love skydiving as much as I did the very first day. Along with making many wonderful friends and becoming part of a new family, I was lucky enough to meet the most amazing man: Cris Fucci, my tandem and AFF instructor and the one man whom I can completely trust with my life. We have been together four and a half years, and it has definitely been the ride of my life.

Print
Categories: Homepage, How Skydiving Changed My Life   |   Rate this article:
No rating
  |  Number of views: 3553   |  Comments: 0
Please login or register to post comments.
PARACHUTIST
USPA STORE

USPA      5401 Southpoint Centre Blvd., Fredericksburg, VA, 22407     (540) 604-9740    M-F 9am-5pm Eastern    (540) 604-9741     uspa@uspa.org

Terms Of UsePrivacy StatementCopyright 2024 by United States Parachute Association
Your Source for all things Skydiving in the U.S.
Back To Top