"I might be about to die" moments, huh?
In no particular order:
-Hiking and realizing I had just walked between a mother bear and her cubs.
-Jumping out of a cherry picker when my chainsaw disturbed a hornet nest I didn't know was there.
-Getting tangled in the anchor line while capsizing my little fishing boat like a drunken idiot.
-The hillbilly that pointed a shotgun at me when I went looking for a phone to call a tow truck in the middle of nowhere (he actually turned out to be a nice guy once I convinced him I was just a dude with a broken car, but I never did find out who he thought I was at first).
-The shark that bumped my mask with it's snout while snorkeling.
-Hearing a tornado tear the house next door to shreds (fortunately, no one was living there at the time).
-The night I was going way too fast around the turns on the bike and catapulted over the guard rail.
-The time I was swearing like a sailor when my mother walked around the corner (I was 6).![]()
Thinking back on it, "I might be about to die" were not the words that went through my mind on any of those occasions.If you were a cat, you'd be on your last life!![]()
Funny thing- of all the close calls I had (those mentioned upthread and others), the time I got scared most thoroughly was when I was in almost no danger at all.
I have a deep fear of heights that is somewhat under control. I don't feel it when climbing or flying, generally. (It is part of why I had those night-terrors after the wreck, though.)
But when I was in Rome as a teen, I went up into the dome of St. Peters. I didn't know I was going up into the dome, I was just following my chaperone. Otherwise, I'd have stayed on the ground floor.
When I made my exit from the stairwell into the dome, the panic was nearly immediate. I tried to turn around, but it was a 1-way path. To get down, I had to go across. And going across meant using a walkway 3 planks wide (with 1/2" gaps between them so i could easily see the floor below) with plexiglass guardrail...so I could easily see the floor below.
I got a light push from the usher, and I vaguely remember nudging someone along the way, but my next truly conscious memory is me sitting against the base of a column on the floor of the basilica, gasping for air and trembling.