I almost got mine long ago but kept it secret. I finally revealed it when I began a new art project with my students. They were asked to write about a memorable event from their past in ten short sentences. Then, they would draw a picture to illustrate it.
I wrote my story too, about my attempt to built an underwater breathing apparatus. It went like this,
When I was fourteen I built a diving helmet out of a five-gallon can. I also made a canvas vest loaded with lead to weigh me down. One summer night I tried it out in a motel swimming pool. My family was on a Florida Keys vacation.
After tying on the weights and helmet I entered the beckoning dark water. It was night. I didn't want anyone around interfering with my experiment.
Slowly walking towards the deep end I submerged and marveled that -for a while- I could re-breath the air captured inside the helmet.
When I was ten-feet under something terrible happened, my invention filled up with water. With so much weight tied to me I could not swim up at all.
Seeing the pool's ladder nearby I staggered to it, reached the bottom rung, and was able to pull myself up.
I knew I was lucky to be alive and wondered how my parents would have felt had they found me lifeless in the pool. As I made my way back to our rented cottage I vowed not to tell them -or anyone else- what had happened.
_______
(From the Darwin Award Website)
Honoring Charles Darwin, the father of evolution, Darwin Awards commemorate those who improve our gene pool--by removing themselves from it in the most spectacular way possible.
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