You don't go anywhere in particular. Anything that gets picked up by a tornado usually gets deposited somewhere later along its track. Lighter objects tend to travel farther.
you practically don't go anywhere you just get blown away
your animals.
Because - at the centre of a tornado (or hurricane) is an area of low pressure. Wind is 'sucked' into the centre in an attempt to equalise the pressure.
The tornado sucked the car right up into the air. The vortex below those rapids sucked my canoe right out from under me!
Dorothy and her little dog, Toto.
The air does get sucked upward in a tornado, but a tornado does not create a complete vacuum, if that's what you mean.
Tom and kelly
The whirling, spinning vortex of a tornado sucked everybody in.
In short, water can get sucked or blown out of the pond.
Air is continuously moving up in a tornado. This means that air surrounding the tornado must move in to replace the rising air.
You will be carried to another location and dropped there. Most likely you will not survive.
Dorothy and Toto