Let us pause, dear reader, amid the endless scroll of holiday tragedies, and consider the case of the British man who met his end paragliding in Spain. A man, presumably in search of the sublime, the thrill of the thermals, the view from the gods. Instead, he found the final plunge. The news wires hum with the predictable dirge: another holiday gone wrong, another family shattered, another statistic in the mounting tally of British deaths abroad. But I am not here to mourn. I am here to diagnose.
This death, you see, is a parable for our age. We have become a nation of thrill-seekers, desperate to escape the grey drizzle of our own making. We flock to the Costas, the Algarves, the sun-baked terraces of the Mediterranean, not to rest, but to conquer. Paragliding. Jet-skiing. Quad-biking. We strap ourselves to machines and hurl ourselves into the void, all for a photograph, a memory, a brief fling with mortality. The ancient Romans had their gladiators; we have our package-holiday daredevils. The difference? They knew they were playing with death. We pretend we are invincible.
And so the tragedy mounts. Not just in Spain, but across the globe: the skier in the Alps, the diver in Thailand, the hiker in the Andes. Each one a tale of a Briton who forgot that holidays are for reading, for gentle strolls, for the quiet contemplation of a sunset. We have turned our leisure into a competitive sport, a race to squeeze every last drop of adrenaline from a fortnight of freedom. It is exhausting. It is decadent. It is, in its own way, a form of cultural decay.
Consider the historical parallel. The late Victorian era, that golden age of empire and industry, spawned a cult of risk-taking. Men climbed Everest, sailed the Northwest Passage, trekked into the heart of darkness. They did so in the name of progress, of science, of national pride. But they also did so because they were bored. They had conquered the world, and there was nothing left to do but tempt fate. Sound familiar? Our empire is gone, our industry is a relic, our pride is a bruised memory. So we go to Spain and jump off cliffs with parasols attached to our backs. It is a sad, glorious, utterly ridiculous end.
And the mounting tragedy? It is not just the numbers. It is the fact that we do not learn. We will read this report, tut our tongues, and book the same trip next year. We will buy the insurance, sign the waiver, and reassure ourselves that it will not happen to us. But it will, to someone. And that someone will be remembered, for a day, in a news cycle, before we move on to the next tragedy. It is the rhythm of our times: a drumbeat of avoidable deaths, each one a footnote in the decline of a once-great civilisation.
So mourn the paraglider, by all means. But more than that, mourn the society that fetishises risk, that sells danger as a commodity, that has forgotten how to be still. Spain will still be there tomorrow, with its sun and its sierras and its thermals. But we will not. And that, dear reader, is the real tragedy: not that a man died on holiday, but that he died because we have forgotten how to live without flirting with death.










