I'm very similar, I can climb a ladder until the top of it is below my hips, then I start to feel unprotected. I can ride a glass elevator, but I can't walk across a rope bridge. I need to know that if I slip and fall, I won't go anywhere.
I might be able to ride that helicopter seat on the outside, well strapped in -- I love amusement park rides, for instance -- but I'd be physically unable to move my body onto the cables.
I can't imagine walking out that new Grand Canyon walkway, either, even though it's got substantial railings. I might feel differently presented with it face to face, but the pictures make me shudder.
I can't imagine walking out that new Grand Canyon walkway, either, even though it's got substantial railings. I might feel differently presented with it face to face, but the pictures make me shudder.
Me, too! All I would be able to think about would be, "What if whatever is holding this thing up collapses??"
What's holding it up is "leverage" :-) There's some enormous amount of counterweight, pretty far in from the edge, plus very deep anchors... There are some construction photos out there, I need to go see it just as an example of Glorious Engineering...
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I might be able to ride that helicopter seat on the outside, well strapped in -- I love amusement park rides, for instance -- but I'd be physically unable to move my body onto the cables.
I can't imagine walking out that new Grand Canyon walkway, either, even though it's got substantial railings. I might feel differently presented with it face to face, but the pictures make me shudder.
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...
Oh. Um. Okay, that might make me twitch too, and I frankly LOVE heights. Hmm.
(Hiking the Canyon again was on my list of "in the next five years" before my feet went south. That, a marathon, Half Dome again, and Mount Whitney.)
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Me, too! All I would be able to think about would be, "What if whatever is holding this thing up collapses??"
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