Inspirational English, Issue 42, Jan/Feb 2018 Inspirational English, Issue 42, Jan Feb 2018 | Page 37

DIVING INTO SOMETHING NEW screaming at 70 miles per hour. ‘Scaredy-cat!’ someone teased. ‘Am not!!’ I retorted, and that gave me no choice but to follow them through the gates. Close up, the roller coaster looked even more ominous, as its sprawling tracks twisted and turned in a nauseating jumble of rails above our heads, like a gigantic nest of wires. With two boys flanking me on either side, I was literally dragged into the middle of the first row of the first car. While I was busy figuring out whether I was going to die from a 50 feet free fall or a heart failure, a female voice boomed overhead, and the vehicle slowly slid into movement. We emerged into the dazzling sun, and that alone immediately gave me a pretty good reason to squeeze my eyes shut. The California Screamin' gradually gathered speed, and after a gentle turn or two, jerked sharply upwards. My uphill journey seemed incredibly slow. like that sort of feeling you probably know as a child, when you had messed up something big and was waiting for the punishment that never seemed to come. Well, I’d had exactly that sense of foreboding and dreaded what was coming. Then suddenly, there we were, balanced precariously on the top of the arch, ready to plunge down at any moment. I didn't know where I got the courage to open my eyelids just a little, but somehow I did—and the view from up high was absolutely amazing! It’s like FROM A TWO-WEEK WINTER PROGRAM THAT you’re soaring above the entire Universal Studios, as if CHANGED MY PERSONALITY, SORT OF. you were up in the clouds, in a fairy tale. Below me, people and vehicles and brightly-coloured houses As it reached the peak, the vehicle stopped briefly, stood like miniature Lego pieces. Oh, and how far and adding a dramatic pause to the descent. I peeped wide I could see! through my eyelids and caught a fleeting glance of That was when I realised that something amazing and the entire Universal Studios—before we plunged unbelievable had happened. Me, who half a minute amidst screams. I clutched at the handles for dear life, ago would have given anything to jump off the car, but that birds-eye view of the park did its work. Five was enjoying every second of the ride! I let go e of the bars and felt the rush of wind in my h t minutes or so ago, I would have never f o o g “I let believed I could have ever, ever stepped d felt outstretched arms, imagined myself soaring onto a roller coaster. Because the fact is, that bars an the clouds. Yes, the downhill bit still of above all my life, I had always stayed as far away nauseated me, but that was an experience I the rush from such things as possible—until my camp- d in my now welcomed. The roller coaster did a few mat es literally dragged me onto my first ride at win gentler ups and downs, then came to a hed more Universal Studios. That was during a two-week outstretc grinding halt where it had set out. ed winter program, which later became a turning s, imagin The end came far too soon, I was still deeply m r a point in my life, sort of. soaring engaged in the ride. Guess what? I can’t For the first few days, I wasn’t particularly active myself for another ride! So now it’s me, the e wait in camp. Very unlike how I am now, back then I ‘scaredy-cat’, pushing the others towards above th was described as ‘composed’ and ‘imaginative’, the back of the queue for another ride! clouds.” both of which were probably just a polite way of I know that a roller coaster ride isn’t much saying ‘asocial’. Still, camp-mates and instructors for most people, but for me, this experience kept trying to get me involved in activities. That day was a starting point for everything else. we happened to be on a field trip to Universal Studios, For the remainder of the two weeks, I decided to step so I hung around with a small group of them. out of my comfort zone. It was a time in my life when I All morning, I had carefully steered clear of any started trying all those new things I’d missed out on attraction that yielded screams, but I hadn’t quite before. Like walking up to strangers and starting a escaped the impression that my camp-mates were conversation, eating an Indian dish with a peculiar trying to coax me into something crazy. So when they smell, and—guess what—sleepover with friends! stopped under an enormous roller-coaster track, I was Which meant that, when I returned from the camp, I beside myself. Fine, I thought, leave me alone. I’ll stay was quite a different person! on the ground taking ugly photographs of you Ivy Chen, 15, Shanghai, China 37