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I survived 13,500ft fall after my parachute got tangled & I smashed into ground at 125mph – but I want to skydive again

A SKYDIVER miraculously survived after her parachute got tangled around her leg and she smashed into the ground at 125mph.

Adrenaline junkie Jordan Hatmaker ended up in a seriously dangerous downplane during her 13,500-foot fall – a move rarely survivable.

SWNSJordan Hatmaker survived a 13,500 foot fall[/caption]

SWNSJordan was nearly paralyzed by the fall[/caption]

Her first parachute was wrapped around her leg, and when her reserve was released, it catapulted both out in opposite directions, leaving her hurtling towards the earth in a terrifying spin.

Jordan hit the ground just 20 seconds after pulling her release cord – suffering a broken back, leg and ankle – and felt every bit of the impact, as she remained conscious.

It took her three months to walk again – and now she plans to take to the skies again, after climbing to Everest basecamp.

Jordan, 35, said:  “Everything happened really quickly.

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“I didn’t have any thoughts because I was spiraling so I didn’t know what was going on, I was just in strategy mode.”

After her 30 second fall, she hit the ground with her left leg and then bounced forward to land on her back.

Jordan spent 25 days in hospital recovering and started walking three months after the accident.

It ended her plans of hiking to Everest Base Camp, which she had planned to start three days after the jump.


But she has rescheduled the trip for November – and she even hopes to skydive again one day.

Jordan said: “I don’t think that you should give up things that you love just because an obstacle was put in your way, life is too short and you should do what makes you happy.

“I really hope to send a message of trying to find the silver lining in whatever situation you’re in.

“You never know how strong you are until you have to be, don’t underestimate yourself.”

LOVE OF SKYDIVING

Jordan, from Virginia Beach, Virginia, did her first-ever skydive in 2015, and completely fell in love with the thrill.

She said: “I loved the challenge and conquering my fears and it really instilled confidence in me.

“I thought I could do anything.”

She did five tandem jumps between 2015 and 2020 and then decided to try and train for her skydiving license so she could jump without an instructor.

Halfway through her training last November, she tried to get in two jumps so that she was well on her way to getting her license before the winter made practicing more difficult.

Her first jump over Suffolk, Virginia went smoothly, but when she leaped out of the Skyvan plane for the second time that day for her sixteenth ever jump, something went wrong.

DOWNPLANE

After about 10 seconds of freefall she moved away from her coach and pulled the cord to release her parachute, but the pilot chute – the initial smaller one that comes out before the main canopy – was wrapped around her leg.

Her leg was suspended in the air as she fell at 125mph with nothing to slow her down, and she scrambled to try and free herself, but as she did her reserve chute was automatically released.

The jolt of the release catapulted the main canopy out of its bag, and the two inflated parachutes fly away from each other to create a ‘downplane’.

The parachutes hurtled her even quicker to the ground, and it is known in skydiving that landing a downplane will usually result in severe injuries or death.

Jordan hit the ground just 20 seconds after pulling her release cord.

She said: “I hit with my left leg first and then I bounced off of my butt and faceplanted, and that’s how I broke my back.

“There was just extreme burning through my lower back and down my legs.”

She did not go unconscious and screamed for help, terrified she was paralyzed.

She said: “First I tried to push myself off the ground, and when I couldn’t move anything my first thought was I was paralyzed and I was yelling that out.

“I’ve never heard sounds like those come out of my body. I screamed bloodcurdling screams.”

ALMOST PARALYZED

Fortunately, she didn’t land too far from the landing sight and five minutes later people rushed over to help her.

An air ambulance was called to take her to a local hospital, where she was told she had broken most of her lower back, her tibia, and ankle, and suffered a spinal cord injury.

“When my back broke some of the pieces of my vertebrae went into my spinal canal,” Jordan, who works in sales for a contractor, said.

“They gave me a LOT of medicine!”

Jordan couldn’t lift her legs or feel her skin anywhere on the core of her body and thighs.

Doctors decompressed her spinal cord before performing spinal fusion surgery and removing the bone fragments.

Two days later she also had surgery to fix her broken tibia and ankle.

She said: “They said we don’t know what kind of mobility she’s going to have, but they didn’t think I was going to be paralyzed because I could wiggle my toes.”

During her recovery, she would yell at her legs to move, but despite her frustrations always believed that she would one day walk again, even though her chances were slim.

She said: “I was very thankful to be alive, that was the thought I had most often.

“I had a lot of hope that I would walk again, even though I couldn’t lift my legs or move them back and forth.

“I had a lot of hope that I would do everything I wanted to do again.”

Thrill seeker Jordan had a two-week climbing trip planned to hike to Everest Base Camp for three days after the accident.

“It was my Mount Everest before my Mount Everest!” she said. “It was just one big mountain to get me ready for the next.”

She did everything, including bathing and going to the toilet, from her bed for 15 days until she managed to sit up in her bed unassisted for the first time.

Jordan stayed in the hospital for a total of 25 days recovering and undergoing physical therapy, before returning home. She lifted her legs for the first time herself two weeks later.

She said: “That moment I could only lift it maybe half an inch off the bed but it was just so great to conquer a milestone.

‘KEEP GOING’

“It was a sign of progress and I was really thrilled and excited, it just gave me more motivation to keep going.

“I started walking three months to the day of the accident.”

She still suffers from other aspects of the spinal cord injury, like numbness, nerve pain, and pelvic floor dysfunction, but has plans to finally conquer Everest Base Camp in November.

She said: “It doesn’t feel real, it feels so surreal that even happened but I’m thankful that the accident happened.

“I feel like there’s a like lot of growth that came out of it, and I really think there’s opportunity in tragedy.

“You can always find something positive even if you can’t see it now, there’s a light at the end of the tunnel and you’re going to be better for whatever you’re going through.”

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Jordan even hopes to skydive again one day, after doing a few practices in the wind tunnel.

“Don’t tell my family!” she joked. “We’ll see what happened when I get to the plane door!”

SWNSJordan did her first-ever skydive in 2015, and completely fell in love with the thrill[/caption]

SWNSJordan stayed in the hospital for 25 days[/caption]

SWNSJordan broke most of her lower back, her tibia, and ankle[/caption]

SWNSJordan walked again three months after the accident[/caption]

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