Thank you again, everyone, for the advice. I took what everyone here said and applied the advice to my jumps this weekend, had a total "me" weekend. Here's what happened.
The last jump I did this weekend, I was to be third to last out on the first pass, surrounded by a group of people I've never seen before.Usually, my nerves at this point would be in overdrive, especially sitting next to the door, but instead, I thought about what I was going to do. When the person next to me learned that I, too, was a solo, he offered to do the jump with me, but because that wasn't my dive plan, and I knew what I wanted to work on, I politely declined and concentrated on what I was going to do, concentrated on touching my handles in the order I would pull them. At 5000', I watched as the hop 'n pop jumped. I watched him under canopy and enjoyed the beauty of that sight.
My turn to jump came. Someone helped me with spotting and told me to go, and I did a perfect diving exit, caught the relative wind and enjoyed the feeling of the air as my body "fell" into its arch while watching the plane go away. For the first time since I've been jumping, or maybe since the first time I jumped, I simply enjoyed the feeling of the wind, the feeling of flying, the beauty of the sky. I looked down for the first time ever, kept total altitude awareness, looked around and felt myself smiling in freefall.
After I pulled and saw the canopy, I played around a bit, as I usually do, and again, for the first time ever, saw my shadow in a what tiny bit of industrial haze there was in an otherwise flawless sky. Again, I smiled a huge smile and remembered why I want to continue doing this.
Landing still leaves a lot to be desired, but I'll work on that. My jumps in general still leave a lot to be desired, but as I told someone last night, while part of me regrets that I've waited this late in life to discover the sport, a larger part of me is so excited because I know that I have the rest of my life to do nothing but learn more.
I'm so looking forward to learning more.
Thank you all, again.
a.j.