Freefall:  The Luckiest Man Alive

Freefall: The Luckiest Man Alive

$29.99 AUD $12.00 AUD

Availability: in stock at our Melbourne warehouse.




Author: Brad Guy

Format: Paperback

Number of Pages:


At the age of 22, Brad, a notoriously outgoing and gregarious person, was celebrating a belated birthday present; a thrill-seeking tandem skydive. In what can only be described as a Ôfreak accidentÕ, Brad and his instructorÕs parachute failed to open properly. Not once É but twice. The reserve chute got tangled in the first. With both parachutes failing, they circled furiously in the air like two rag dolls in a treacherous vortex, plunging 14,000 feet to the ground at 80kmph. What are the odds of surviving a freefall from a plane 14,000 feet in the air? That is the equivalent of free falling from half of Everest. Well, they did survive, only just, but not without trauma and injury. Both physical and mental. A broken spine and torn neck were BradÕs physical scars; severe depression and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) were his unseen scars. Brad went from a fun-loving, carefree young man to an introverted recluse, silently battling the dark throes of physical pain and deep emotional scarring. With large doses of family love and intense personal counselling, Brad slowly fought back to reclaim a Ônew lifeÕ. A life that wasnÕt like the old one, for that had died in the accident, but nevertheless a new life with a new perspective.
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Description
Author: Brad Guy

Format: Paperback

Number of Pages:


At the age of 22, Brad, a notoriously outgoing and gregarious person, was celebrating a belated birthday present; a thrill-seeking tandem skydive. In what can only be described as a Ôfreak accidentÕ, Brad and his instructorÕs parachute failed to open properly. Not once É but twice. The reserve chute got tangled in the first. With both parachutes failing, they circled furiously in the air like two rag dolls in a treacherous vortex, plunging 14,000 feet to the ground at 80kmph. What are the odds of surviving a freefall from a plane 14,000 feet in the air? That is the equivalent of free falling from half of Everest. Well, they did survive, only just, but not without trauma and injury. Both physical and mental. A broken spine and torn neck were BradÕs physical scars; severe depression and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) were his unseen scars. Brad went from a fun-loving, carefree young man to an introverted recluse, silently battling the dark throes of physical pain and deep emotional scarring. With large doses of family love and intense personal counselling, Brad slowly fought back to reclaim a Ônew lifeÕ. A life that wasnÕt like the old one, for that had died in the accident, but nevertheless a new life with a new perspective.