Ooh, and it has an excellent point: You don't accelerate linearly to terminal velocity speed and then stop accelerating. Your acceleration slows as you get closer. So you wouldn't be all that close to terminal velocity after just six seconds or so!
Indeed, it's a limit towards which (with variants such as attitude of body aside) you will asymptotically approach so that in an infinite fall you will reach that. (Ignoring practical stuff like infinitely increasing air density, singularity formation and finding an entire infinite universe filled with air in the first place!)
But if you take a more streamlined position and then switch to one with a far larger cross section[1] you could zoom past the 'average' V
lim and then approach it from the other direction, decelerating rapidly (but still in trouble, availability of parachutes aside).
Which also has implications towards the "how to survive a fall" question. You probably want to maintain the most resistive position for almost all the way down (so that your V
max is never very high, relatively) before adopting the 'best' landing position. e.g. feet to hit water first (probably to horribly break, but acting as a combined penetrator and crumple zone to get your torso and head past the problematic impact bit, then hope you have positioned your arms so they still work and can keep you afloat in the absence of any useful leg motions, if that's what happens in that situation), an attitude that has a higher V
lim so you need to time it to be as late as possible. Note that I'm almost certainly wrong about the 'best' position.
I've heard of a case
[citation needed]where a tandem-jumping that went wrong had the instructor orientate him and his 'passenger' to fall back first so that he hit the ground first and cushioned their fall, so that she (IIRC) might survive. And did. He did not, of course. Trickier to keep the speed down, of course, since a tandem jumping pair appears to have a higher V
lim (for obvious reasons of mass and cross section), one reason perhaps why they often seem to go out with drogue chutes. Maybe so they don't outpace the accompanying camera jumpers/other companions who are there to record the event.
ICBW.
[1] Supermanish and/or arms tucked well in to the torso, maybe, to start with, then spread eagle. Noting that I'm only going on common sense and what I've seen of skydivers, not practical experience.