"Have less windows, cover things up so no kids have to, like, suffer like I did and go through all of this," said 10-year-old Kyla Graham.
She didn't know it at the time, but it had already happened to another kid. That is, the unexpected trauma and pain of flying through a glass window while jumping on a trampoline at the Four Stars Gymnastics Academy.
PHOTOS: Girl jumps off trampoline, through window at gymnastics center
"I literally, like superman, I mean I landed just like this on the ground," said Nick Dodson, while acting out what happened.
Now 23, Dodson was that other kid. Seven years ago he was jumping with friends at Four Stars, when he too found himself flying in the wrong direction. Like Kyla, he landed on the sidewalk outside, surrounded by glass and bleeding.
"I still don't have full function of my thumb," he said. "I can't bend my wrist all the way. I still have some glass in there. I feel that every so often. And then I got cut all the way across the back of my head. I think I got 15 or 16 stitches, or staples."
Years later, the trampolines at Four Stars are still only about three feet from the giant tempered glass windows. In a phone interview, Donald McPherson with USA Gymnastics told us their rules state they should be at least 10 feet from any obstruction.
"So, having this trampoline, you know, within a couple of feet of that window is about as egregious as it can get," he said. "This is an aberration to our industry."
ONLY ON 7 VIDEO: Antioch girl jumping on trampoline crashes through window
Four Stars is a current member of USA Gymnastics.
"I mean, I went through, they should've fixed it," Dodson said. "I mean, they shouldn't be in the window at all."
In 2007, Dodson's parents decided not to file a lawsuit against the family that owned this facility at that time.
Kyla's family is considering legal action against the current owner, who has yet to return ABC7 News' calls.