TheUtmostTrouble TheUtmostTrouble

Between A Sled And A Hard Place

So there I was, five years old, face covered in blood, crying at my own birthday party. It was January, windy and cold, crisp and biting, with just the right amount of snow for sledding. I always hated having a winter birthday. I wanted to do things associated with summer, like go swimming, play volleyball, or just horse around in the sun. Instead, I settled for sledding, the only winter activity that seemed worth my time.

My Aunt and Uncle own Bell Farms, where their house sits over a moderately big hill. They even invested in a tow rope to help haul the kids back up after sledding. (The hike back up was terrible). We reserved the hill for my birthday party, but were unable to use the tow rope. But, I got to invite friends along!

That afternoon the air was stale, the snow was packed tightly to the ground, and the temperature was somewhere far below freezing. My aim was speed. We set a steep course, packing the solid snow into the ground as much as possible with our tiny feet. I had the perfect sled, long and thin, lightweight, and the perfect technique to go with it. My plan was to lay on my stomach, close to the ground, with my arms and legs squeezed tightly to my body. That way, with little air resistance, I would speed down the hill faster than anyone had ever seen.

My plan worked for the most part. The snow was slick and slippery, hard like ice, yet dense like snow. I easily gained speed as I began sledding down the hill, like a bullet, tucking my arms and legs into my body. I was pretty smart for how young I was, understanding that air resistance was a speed factor. What I didn’t understand was that for such a steep hill, I weighed a lot more than my sled. About halfway down, I started noticing that I was slipping forward on the sled, my stomach dragging on the material. I tried pushing myself up but didn’t want to lose momentum. I slid, face-first into the crusty, cold snow. I remember my sled sliding out from under me, racing to the bottom as I slid as well with my face in the ground. It was traumatic. I didn’t just face-plant in the crusty ice and snow; I slid through layer after layer, each strip of ice slicing my face deeper, burning me with its cold edges, and taking the impact of my body.

When I was finally able to stop myself from descending down the hill any further, the damage had already been done. I’m not sure if I blacked out before my body stopped or if I just blocked the experience out in my mind. All I know is that I either woke up or returned to the present with the sensation of suffocating, face in the snow. I wasn’t sure what happened, and couldn’t quite grasp the reality of my situation yet. I quickly rolled over, disoriented. Everything was cold, but my face was scalding, numb, yet pulsing. I wasn’t sure what happened. I took my hat off, thinking I was overheating. I was a little sore from sledding, nothing out of the usual, all except my face. What happened?

My sled was already at the bottom of the hill, but I wasn’t walking halfway down to get it. I was so tired. As I started climbing the first half of the hill, pondering over what went wrong with my plan, I started to see the faces of my friends and family at the top of the hill. They looked worried. Then I felt it. I put my hands to my face and they came back red. I’d never seen my parents run so fast, especially downhill! My mum made it first, motherly instinct and anxiety pumping through her veins. My dad got to me within the next minute, scooping me up from the ground where I sat with my mother. He carried me up the hill as I sobbed and covered his jacket with blood and tears. My face burned on the heavy material of his jacket. I knew it would stain, and so did he, but neither of us cared at that moment.

I remember sobbing as my face became less and less numb from the cold, the hot blood pouring from awful cuts made by the icy snow. My mum tried to clean me up in the bathroom, using my family’s first aid kit. It was torture. The ice had removed the skin from my cheeks, cutting deep into my eye sockets. I hadn’t started wearing glasses yet, and I didn’t wear goggles when sledding, so I had no eye protection at all. Luckily, the cuts were only in the skin of my face and my eyes hadn’t retained any damage. What I thought was going to be a spectacular, fun, day, turned into a brutal memory that I carry with me today.

Although I was young, and the injuries were not life-threatening, I still bear the scars today and remember that day quite vividly. The scars on my cheekbones accentuate my eye bags, creating drooping lines over my cheeks. Not many people know they’re scars. At this point, it’s kind of just how my face is. My mum took pictures of that day, wounds and no wounds. She lovingly calls the little girl from those pictures Hamburg Face. For your information, it really did look like half of my face was made from a package of raw hamburg.

I remember seeing my face completely scabbed, bloodied, and scarred, and feeling so disgusting and ugly. I felt like the girl that turns into a blueberry from Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory or Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. I just wanted to have a fun time, and suddenly I had morphed into a bloody pulp, almost like the bloated blueberry. I was young, so, of course, I thought I looked scary. It was just so shocking and traumatic of an experience. I definitely think Violet could really understand the experience of suddenly being mutilated by something that seemed so fun and carefree. Her gum chewing turned her into a giant blueberry, and my speed sledding turned me into a hamburg face.

“Violet! You’re turning violet!”

“(My Name)! Your face looks like raw hamburg!”

Now that I think about it, that’s probably not the greatest quote for a movie. It’s kind of gross.

Photo on Foter.com

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5 Comments

  • emousseau20
    April 8, 2020 at 1:17 pm 

    I love how this story really drew me in to feel the experience that you went through while I was reading. I could truly feel the emotion behind it. How were you able to relay this story in such a descriptive and emotional manner so that others could truly be drawn in? Also, how did this experience effect your view and attitude towards your birthday, sledding, and winter/snow?

  • eredmun20
    May 14, 2020 at 10:30 am 

    Wow! The way you described this event in such detail is very remarkable and painted a very vivid picture in my brain. I like your use of the comparison to the movie Willy Wonka, the example you gave really is fitting. Reading this reminded me of when I was around the same age and I was sliding on the ice down a hill after my brother and I got off the bus and I fell flat on my face, blood going everywhere. It wasn’t a pretty sight. Though you probably aren’t fond of the nickname your mother came up with, it is quite funny and by the way you described it, very fitting.

  • nlinkel20
    May 26, 2020 at 4:02 pm 

    HAMBURG??? That story left me cringing in pain for your younger self, but also laughing at your ability to joke about HAMBURG. It’s neat to think about the clever things we thought we were doing back then, and then looking back at how badly some of those things turned out. Maybe you could try a skateboard down a hill next time! Just kidding, don’t do that. Anyways, this story had really good imagery, despite it being a bit grotesque. You’re doing great 😀

  • ballaire20
    May 30, 2020 at 1:56 am 

    First off *Minecraft Oow noises*, second off I am terribly sorry this happened to you, nobody should have to deal with this on their Birthday of all occasions. The details were so vivid and specific I found myself gasping while reading it. The writing is so well done and I was constantly on the edge of my seat. You made the physical, mental, and even emotional trauma very clear. Thank you for posting.

  • minman20
    May 31, 2020 at 9:48 am 

    The descriptive words that you use in this piece make it AMAZING. I love the descriptions of the snow and your sled, especially because it really pulls the reader into the moment you were living at the time. This reminded me of the time I went face first over a scooter when I was 4, I just remember my face sliding across the pavement and feeling really funny after. It wasnt snow, but I bet our faces looked and felt pretty similar at the time.

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