Check out that view! |
I have now officially started my fifth and final year as an
ALT on the JET Program. I can’t believe
how fast the time has passed! I still
remember getting off the plane at Narita Airport and beginning to sweat; not
from nervousness, but from the humidity.
Okay, part of it was nervousness too.
Since this is my last year on JET, I decided that I want to
do as many things as I can before my contract ends. Travel, eat, meet new friends,
everything! I don’t want to leave JET
thinking “I wish that I had done this while I still had the chance”. So I wanted to start my last year off with a
bang! Or more precisely, with a drop. Out of an airplane. 30,000 feet from the ground.
On August 16th, my friend and I went to Tokyo Skydiving Club in Saitama to go skydiving!! It was something that I had always
wanted to do but was too scared to try.
We were originally going to go the Thursday before, but due to problems
with the plane we had to cancel. But we
were able to reschedule for Sunday at 10:15 AM.
After parking the car at the drop-zone parking lot (less
than a 2 minute walk away from the gathering area and main office), we walked
towards the gathering area, where we were greeted by a Japanese woman who
showed us the way to the check-in area.
After filling out the application form, we got to choose whether we
wanted a cameraman, or a hand camera (there is also an option to opt out of
having a camera). Jumping with a cameraman
means that they’ll take videos and pictures of you during your jump (costs an
extra 16,000 yen). The hand camera
option (which my friend and I both decided on) meant that the instructor who
rode tandem with us would take videos of us (no pictures). This option cost an extra 8,000 yen, so
altogether the total came out to 40,000 yen each (the base price for a tandem
jump is 32,000 yen). Click here to look at the prices (in Japanese).
Once we filled out the application form we went back to the
front office and paid. We were told
beforehand that we would need to bring photo ID and our hanko, or personal Japanese seal, but they didn’t end up asking for
them. Good thing we didn’t die!
A few minutes later a man comes out and starts naming off
the people who will be on the next flight.
“…Sato-san…Mori-san…” Then he stops. He had already named off all the Japanese
people, so my friend and I were the only two left. He reads the sheet again, looks up and in my
direction he says a simple “…ne.” In Japanese, the word “ne” has many meanings. In
this case, it meant “This isn’t-a Japanese name goddammit I don’t really want to try reading
it katakana is dumb” “And you.” After telling him how to say my name, he
looked at my friend and said “…issho.” (Issho in
English means “together”). He did try to say my friend’s name
afterwards, which came out as “Charushi”.
My friend (Chelsea by the way) and I both got a kick out of that hahaha.
Issho and Ne, on the way to the plane |
After the man had checked that everyone had arrived,
including Ne and Issho, we were ushered to a room. The man gave a brief description of what we
would be doing, but mostly told everyone to look at the pictures in the room. And with a cute “Bye bye!” he left the
room. A couple minutes later our
instructors came to get us. My
instructor’s name was Aki, and he was fluent in English. He had lived in Seattle and in Australia for
a while so he had a strong Australian accent.
He was hilarious too! He told me:
“Right before we jump, I’ll tell you to make a banana shape with your
body. So when I say ‘Make a banana
shape!’ make a banana, okay?”
Once everyone had put their gear on we got in a van and made
our way to the plane! I was the first
person to get on, so I got to sit in the cockpit with the pilot! It was amazing to see the view from the front
of the plane!
When we were at about 30,000 feet in the air, the hatch was
opened and everyone began dropping out of the plane! I was the second-to-last person to jump, and
for me personally, one of the scariest parts was watching all the other people
jump before me. One second they would be
there, and then they would be dropping and I wouldn’t see them anymore. That was pretty scary.
Soon it was my turn.
We inched our way closer and closer to the hatch. “Oh my God I’m really about to do this” was
all that I could think about. Aki said, “Okay
now put your legs outside”. This is insane. Shit, the wind is gonna blow me away before
he can open up the parachute and we’re going to die. “Make a banana shape! Ready?
Here we go!”
Dropping from the plane |
The second we dropped out of the plane was the scariest part
of the experience. It was like someone held
you by your feet and then dropped you, head first, into a never-ending abyss.
But damn, the view was amazing.
Check out those clouds! And Aki's arm! 120 miles per hour isn't easy on one's skin! |
My view from the sky (before diving into the cloud) |
The clouds were so close, and skydiving right into a cloud
was so intense. It was like going
through a really heavy mist (at 120 miles per hour). Once we passed through the cloud, Aki opened
up our parachute so we could enjoy the full view from the sky (at a more
leisurely pace).
In the cloud |
After we landed we loaded ourselves back onto the van and
drove back to the meeting area. Aki then
took all the gear off of me and then gave me a SD card with videos of the whole
experience. The entire process took
about 2 hours, but the experience will last a lifetime.
For anyone who is interested in skydiving in Japan, please check out the Tokyo Skydiving Club!! The instructors are extremely friendly and professional, and many of them can speak Japanese and English fluently! The flights fill up pretty quickly, so I suggest emailing them about a week before you want to go.
Let's enjoy skydiving! |
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