Originally posted by: Yossarian
and you use "into the pool" in each of the last 3 sentences. it is a bit redundant.
more than a bit....get descriptive but not to an annoying extent.
instead of saying that shell tumbed down into the pool, be more descriptive about the situation...
fror example, here are some sample questions/thoughts to get you thingking?
was she in the tube with you at the same time as you? if not, then technically you saw it from a distance if that....since it was spiral slide you probably didn't, no?
if you didn't see, maybe you heard it right? was she screaming? di you hear her crashing agaisnt the sides of the slides?
For example: ( jsut made this up)
I remember when my buddy jonsey and I used to go to the water slides at Six flags. that guy was a complete wreck when he got up there. it's as if he had been ignoring the, literally, thousands of steps that we waited hours on the get up there.
and/or
Seeing him go down that sldie the first time was priceless. The guy had been a complete wreck at the top, breaking into what I thought were seizures and talking about how he "had to get down now." Poor jonsey just sat there, seemingly paralyzed when he sat down in the slide launch pool. He had lost his nerve, and was now oblivious to everything, and people behind us were getting antsy. Finally out of patience, the operator gave him a good shove from the back and he was off, too stunned to do anything about it. I swear, those screams were heard for miles. The poor fool was sturggling to grasp onto anything on his way down too, and you could hear his wailing and his body crashing against the sides of the slides all the way down. Finally, seeing him fly out into the wading pool, even from my perch highup at the beginning of the ride was priceless. The poor guy flew out head first, and then proceeded to do everything humanly possible to drown himself out of panic. Finally, a few lifeguards calmed him down and got him out safely.
Needless to say, he was not, and never will be, able to live it down.