My ride at the aMuSement park.
“Enjoy your day at Cedar Point,” said the cheery ticket taker.
I planned to! It had been over 20 years since my last visit, so today I was going to be a thrill seeker maniac!
Just past the opening gate was my first coaster challenge…the Raptor. Sounds nice, I thought. Named for a bird. I like birds.
The Raptor is an inverted roller coaster, meaning you sit beneath the rail to ride.
Between the trees I could see only a small portion of this twisty ride.
My youngest son said he wasn’t going to ride. Assuring, I tried to be the good Dad by saying “These coasters don’t go fast–It won’t be bad.”
I ditched my wheelchair & my cane and wall-walked my way to the rides loading zone. I was already exhausted, so it would be nice to sit for a few minutes and enjoy the ride!
The collar came down over my head while the attendant had to snap my crotch restraint. A buzzer sounded and off we went—-like a bat outta hell.
I was on the Raptor a whole three seconds and I knew this had been a big mistake!
Because the Raptor wasn’t like taking a ride in my grandma’s Dodge Dart. It felt more like an F-18 on Red Bull.
The coaster featured six inversions including a 100ft vertical loop, a zero-G roll, something called a cobra roll and two corkscrews.
Typically, I laugh hysterically on a coaster, but on the Raptor I could only muster a straining groan similar to when the wind gets knocked out of you. I had no idea which way was what…up, down, right, left. I needed a GPS to find my state of mind. I would have pooped my pants but I had no idea which way gravity was working!
As usual in times of stress, my body stiffened like a mannequin at Old Navy. So while others were riding seated with their legs dangling under them…Odd Sock was fixed in a rigor-mortis prone position with the nylon strap separating my boys downstairs like the Berlin Wall.
As we came too a stop, my wife asked me if I was OK. But I couldn’t answer–my tongue was so far down my throat my uvula was getting lonely!
The attendant unhooked my crotch strap. I tilted upright and with someone under each arm, I began a body-cast like shuffle to the employee elevator. I was covered in a cold sweat. My son said “Dad, you don’t look so good.” I mumbled back “I don’t feel so good.”
Before my ride on the Raptor.
After my ride on the Raptor.
I slumped into my wheelchair like a sack of potatoes and didn’t take another ride the rest of the day. (Unless you count a stop on the American Standard porcelain bowl!)
I overheard my family medical expert saying things like “vestibular problems”…”equilibrium reactions are off”…and “neuroreceptors.”
Was it my MS that made me feel this bad? Are my days as a roller coaster roach over?
Have you had a similar experience? How has MS limited your “Fear Factor” activities?
Please tell me your story. I’m the dopey looking one sitting on the park bench under a tree holding the giant stuffed animal.
“Hope you come back to see us at Cedar Point” said another cheery attendant as we were leaving.
Yeah right.
3 Replies to “My ride at the aMuSement park.”
You are lucky you survived that! I can’t even handle the tree swing in the backyard! So, what giant stuffy did ya get?
I can’t stop laughing!!!!!
Nicole
I can’t believe you subjected yourself to that. This must be a guy thing, never outgrowing that compulsion to push the physical envelope!
Darn funny in the telling, though 😉