Thursday, March 16, 2017

Your Turn

Are you scared of heights?


23 comments:

  1. JustReading3:04 AM

    Yes. I wasn't when I was younger, but I am now.

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  2. sandybrook3:04 AM

    Somewhat. I got over it for many years and I did work on the 82nd floor of the Empire State Building, but I'm sort of nervous about flying and I'd never do it in a helicopter or a small plane like a 2-seater. And I won't go on a giant Ferris Wheel either.

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  3. austin3:05 AM

    I am and I hate it too because things like sky diving look like great fun.

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  4. hellyes3:07 AM

    I have a fear of heights and falling... like from heights. My parents said I walked off the side of a cliff when I was about 18 months old. My dad caught my hand when I was below the ground level of the cliff. Maybe it was my parents freaking out, maybe it was something else...but I've had a fear of heights and falling from things...anything with my legs dangling, like a ski lift...for as long as I can recall.

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  5. sandybrook3:07 AM

    Forgot about walking across my causeway which is steep and made of steel and you can see the water if you look down at your feet. The first time I did that walk I actually got dizzy and dis-oriented. So I walk it to a point, turn around and come back (walking for exercise).

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  6. Yes.

    I hate flying, too. Very, very rarely fly at all.

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  7. Meg00m3:23 AM

    Yes but only if a true risk of falling. Like on a walking down a steep hill or climbing down a fence or shaky ladder ..going up or staying up is no problem.

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  8. James3:26 AM

    No the higher the better

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  9. Phyllis Whitweed3:29 AM

    I LOVE heights! It's a amazing to me.

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  10. shaddup mimsey4:05 AM

    Yes and I am also afraid of driving over bridges which sucks because I live in Florida where there are bridges everywhere.

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  11. One. Real. Housewife.4:06 AM

    Whatever happened to Derrick? Did his trolls finally get the best of him, or is he posting under another alias these days?

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  12. Proud Yankee4:07 AM

    Well, it also sucks living in Florida, so I guess you get it coming and going.

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  13. I am weirdly a little afraid of lower heights, like being near a railing of a three story building. But I have jumped out of an airplane at 28k feet!

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  14. shaddup mimsey6:16 AM

    No, living in paradise doesn't suck at all. Margaritaville is all kinds of awesome.

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  15. Martín7:35 AM

    Yes. I go on roller coasters and stuff, but being stationary at a high altitude gives me vertigo sometimes.

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  16. BTownGirl8:07 AM

    Same! I live in MA and I'm terrified of the Tobin Bridge and the whole mess of overpasses next to Logan Airport.

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  17. Haywood Jablomee10:27 AM

    Afraid vs. Scared. I'm afraid of heights. Heights scare me. I'm not scared of heights. When people misuse scared/afraid it is like fingernails on a chalkboard to me. On is a verb, on is not. Just a personal pet peave.

    I remember attending work-related classroom/symposium for several weeks on 50something floor of World Trade Center building 1 in 3/2001. My knees would buckle within 10 feet of floor to ceiling windows.. Had to take an escalator and 2 elevators to get that high. And the storiess weren't 10 feet but sometimes 20-25.
    The first high-speed elevators I was ever on and the could probable fit a sedan and opened from both sides.

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  18. Scandi Sanskrit10:58 AM

    Two-story escalators (the ones that connect two floors but skip one—there's one in my town that connects the 6th floor to the 8th floor, and I was stupid enough to do a selfie video which turned into a rear-view mirror experience and I was like, "holy shit!") and being in the very back row of a really big, steep auditorium at the cinema.

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  19. Hortensia11:00 AM

    I scream at the fly overs at the IMax.

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  20. Scandi Sanskrit11:04 AM

    I'm sorry. I do that on purpose (and I overuse "scary") because it sounds quirky like "woo-woo" (an otherwise pejorative term) sounds quirky. My personal pet-peeve is when people say "film star" or call any celebrity a "star", because I know we're all made of stardust: http://www.physics.org/article-questions.asp?id=52

    I say "castmate" instead of "costar", and "actor/actress" (to refer to professions). But I tolerate when people figuratively say, "Regina George thinks she's the 'star' [main attraction] of the show." Just not when discussing the profession in general.

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  21. I get nervous if I'm not in an enclosed area, but I can live with it.

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  22. Airhead4:16 AM

    it freaks me out if I focus on it too much, but I feel like I can hype myself up enough to do certain fun things

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