FlashBack recount (For those who are intending to do this piece of crap)
This entry was created on Wednesday, October 7, 2009, at 1:56 AM.
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On a sunny day, time passed by slowly as I waited eagerly to ride and eons past by before my turn came. Gazing up to the gigantic roller coaster I was surprisingly calm. Having seen others ride the Behemoth and equipped with information from an over-exaggerated cartoons series, I thought I knew exactly what to expect. In truth what was about to happen was beyond the border of my imagination. Behemoth, the biggest and fastest ride in Canada, would be the first rollercoaster I would ever ride in my life.
Having overheard the rumors and been through the endless lineup, my expectation for the prestigious Behemoth grew to mythical proportions. The roller coaster buzzed to life and rolled lazily up a ramp. As it struggled up the ramp, a tinge of excitement and fear crept over me. Although I have seen the Behemoth many times from afar, I never truly comprehended the enormity of it until that moment. While I admired the view I realized how high off the ground I was. If I could change the ride in anyway I wanted at that moment, I would have made the ride climb forever into the sky out of the fear that I would have to plummet down at some point. As I was torn between fear and excitement (Remove comma) I anticipated for the peak of the rollercoaster, the point when the ride would be sent into freefall. As if to answer my question, the seats in front of me dropped out of view.
There was a split second of uncertainness when the ride remained still. Then as if someone tipped over the first block in a field of dominoes, the ride began to accelerate. During the split seconds between the stillness and the freefall, my fear collided with my excitement. Needless to say, my fear won and my body entered a state of panic. Before I had the chance to brace my self or even for adrenaline to course through my body, the ride plunged down. My feet and buttocks rose off the seat as the exponential force of gravity took control. I felt certain that I would to shoot off the ride at any moment. I was going to plunge hundreds of feet and with a splat, crash onto the pavement below. I could see the headline now: "Fatal tragedy: Teen Falls from Roller Coaster."
The blockade that is my lips acted like a dam under too much pressure. At first, a small crack materialized and shot off a small pressurized stream, followed by the eventual and inevitable burst of torrent that was my scream. It was a good three seconds before I realized I had been screaming at the top of my lungs and that my arms had been flapping helplessly in the air. My body instinctively forced my hand back to the iron bars. Meanwhile, frozen in terror, my mind watched helplessly as if itwas trapped behind an unbreakable layer of glass. It never occurred to me to stop screaming; the sheer horror of the ride overwhelmed my mind. If someone offered to take me off the ride right there and then for everything I owed, I would have given the offer some serious consideration.
Freefalling from the coaster took no more than three seconds yet it felt like hours before it ended. As the ride approached the plateau section my buttocks and feet dropped with a thud and found comfort in contacting solid objects. There was a shift of momentum as the sensation of being imprinted into the seat replaced the feeling of being shot off into the air. My hair fluttered in ways I thought only possible in movies. Meanwhile, my scream died down to a cry in response to the transition in momentum. Traveling at neck breaking speed, my body was pressed into the seat and I strained to keep my head up. The coaster began to climb again, this time at tremendous speed. Out of breath, I gasped for air and for a moment, thought I had everything under control only to be proven wrong as I let out another cry. Approaching freefall once again, the pitch and magnitude of the cry intensified in proportion to my anticipation, like the cry of a warrior charging into battle.
The following freefall experience was so frighteningly similar that someone might as well have rewound time and replayed my first freefall experience the way people watch a scene over and over again during a movie. What is great about a roller coaster is that the rush of freefalling does not diminish no matter how many times the person experienced it. Each slope felt refreshingly new yet frighteningly old at the same time. Every sense was sharpened by adrenaline. I felt the wind in my hair, saw the flapping of arms all around me, and my muffled scream over the roaring wind. Time seemed to be in slow motion and everything seemed surreal. As the ride ascended and descended I wondered if I was experiencing reality, a flashback, or a premonition of time yet to come. Before I knew it, the ride halted to a stop. Dazed, I staggered out of the ride with a wide grin on my face that would last hours.
Even as my mind plays my experience on the ride now, I can feel my feet rise off the ground, the wind rushing through my hair, and hear my screams echoing in the air.
This was found somewhere idk i just help him change some words because his vocab like kns
profile: reach my prismic soul.
Hello, my name is paper and I am a piece of paper.
My purpose is to have people write on me and to be printed by printers.
I like the smell of wood because it smells like my parents.
My ambition is to be thrown away and recycled.
wishlist: unconditional desires.
I wish to become Kamen rider W.