Canucks Tryout Ends in Scaffolding Freefall
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joewcarson
@joewcarson ยท Jun 16, 2026
was in Vancouver during spring. Some friends were there like Ryan Craine and Chevy and I think we were either going to watch some hockey or tryout for the Canucks. It was beautiful out, the city was so clean and warm, and just a lovely day. We made it to this field where the coach was an older woman who was nice, but also didnโt take any shit. We mostly did running drills and some soccer ball stuff. Didnโt have skates on yet. Then we went inside to the ice facility and there were more drills before we could suit up for hockey. There were these really tall scaffolding on wheels that were like 50ft up that some of us were on. Me and Chevy were on one against a wall and without warning he pushed off the wall so it would roll across the floor to the other side. I yelled down to everyone on the floor to watch out since this thing was rolling right thru the middle of it. Crashed into the other wall, which jarred me loose and sent me flying off the platform, landed on some weak metal bars that then bent and collapsed forward into the another wall, and then fell straight down onto the floor. Somehow wasnโt dead, not even that badly hurt, but woke up then.
35 keywords tagged
๐ค Ryan Craine๐ค Jon Chevy๐ค coach
๐ Vancouver๐ field๐ ice facility๐ wall๐ floor
๐ awe๐ relief๐ alarm๐ invincibility
โก watchโก runโก pushโก rollโก yellโก crashโก fallโก landโก bendโก collapse
โฆ survivalโฆ dangerโฆ competitionโฆ recklessnessโฆ spring
๐ฎ scaffolding๐ฎ platform๐ฎ skate๐ฎ soccer ball๐ฎ metal bar
๐ฏ hockey๐ฏ tryout๐ฏ drill
โง AI Analysis: This dream places you in an exciting, aspirational setting โ a Canucks tryout on a gorgeous Vancouver spring day โ suggesting a desire for high-stakes achievement alongside close friends. The shift from clean, warm optimism to a terrifying scaffolding crash mirrors how quickly confidence can give way to chaos when someone else's recklessness (Chevy pushing off the wall) puts you in freefall. Surviving the fall without serious injury points to a deep sense of resilience, as if your subconscious is testing just how much you can take before it truly breaks you.