
Emma Carey still finds it strange how normal she felt on the morning of June 9, 2013. She’d always assumed that the mind or the gut would ping before life-altering event, that there would be some kind of foreboding sensation or creeping thought.
But as the then 20-year-old stepped aboard the skydiving helicopter during a holiday in Portugal, she felt only excitement. A short time later, that was replaced by "all-encompassing" terror as the parachute tangled on opening, the instructor strapped to her back fell silent, and the mountains rushed towards her.
Emma Carey free-fell 14,000ft that day. Yet somehow, she survived. The accident left her with incomplete spinal injury, the consequences of which she will live with for the rest of her life.
The following is an excerpt from Emma's memoir, The Girl Who Fell From The Sky, an extraordinary true story of resilience, courage, hope and finding lightness after the heaviest of landings.
To hear more from Emma, listen to her chat with Mia Freedman on Mamamia's No Filter podcast below or via your favourite podcast app.
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Going from a wheelchair to walking (twice) has given me a very unique insight into what it’s like to live with both a disability that is outwardly obvious as well as one that is predominantly invisible. The first time I left the hospital in my wheelchair, I was terrified. People stared at me brazenly. Others came rushing to help. My line of sight was at a lower level to what I was used to and it made the world look entirely different. I felt self-conscious in a way I’d never experienced before, like I was naked in a crowd with a spotlight bearing down on me.