What possesses a man to tie 105 helium balloons to a lawn chair and fly? The guy from Oregon, Kent Couch, explains our desire to chase adventure as well as anyone:
"When you're a little kid and you're holding a helium balloon, it has to cross your mind. When you're laying in the grass on a summer day, and you see the clouds, you wish you could jump on them. This is as close as you can come to jumping on them. It's just like that."
I tip my hat to the man who flew 193 miles powered by balloons, following his Little Kid desire to jump on clouds, and reminding us how amazing people can be.
I should focus on the innate sense of adventure that rests in all of us, waiting to be released, but at the moment I am focused on the folding lawn chair. I am reminded of the Precision Lawn Chair Marching troops that have been marching in holiday parades for a few decades now. This is a picture of a unit in a Chicago suburb. When these guys march, they bark out cadences--"She don't know and I don't care, I'm wearing yesterday's underwear." Now that's some fine ambition there.
I am not as impressed with these slobs with their patriot shorts and black socks as I am with the man who figured out how to fly, but I am still inspired by their ability to see something as basic as a folding aluminum lawn chair in a different light. They have taken it out of the back yard and given it a new purpose.
"When you're a little kid and you're holding a helium balloon, it has to cross your mind. When you're laying in the grass on a summer day, and you see the clouds, you wish you could jump on them. This is as close as you can come to jumping on them. It's just like that."
I tip my hat to the man who flew 193 miles powered by balloons, following his Little Kid desire to jump on clouds, and reminding us how amazing people can be.
I should focus on the innate sense of adventure that rests in all of us, waiting to be released, but at the moment I am focused on the folding lawn chair. I am reminded of the Precision Lawn Chair Marching troops that have been marching in holiday parades for a few decades now. This is a picture of a unit in a Chicago suburb. When these guys march, they bark out cadences--"She don't know and I don't care, I'm wearing yesterday's underwear." Now that's some fine ambition there.
I am not as impressed with these slobs with their patriot shorts and black socks as I am with the man who figured out how to fly, but I am still inspired by their ability to see something as basic as a folding aluminum lawn chair in a different light. They have taken it out of the back yard and given it a new purpose.
Comments
That and macaroni cheese on pizza!
ICK.
funny you should write about the lawn chair brigade. I actually formed one of these in my neighborhood and we marched in the 4th of July parade for 3 years in a row. I took a lot of crap from guys who were not secure with their own sexuality about it being a "chick thing" but I had fun just the same. I had one woman come out of the crowd and sit on my lap while I was relaxing in my folding lawn chair. Now that was FUN!!! :)
Gina, 4 year olds and 17 year olds.
My friend was in a lawn chair brigade. They didn't wear patriotic shorts.
In this house, lawn chairs are routinely broken up to feed the patio heater.
It wouldn't be an adventure.
It would be suicide.