As I stated to Capt Neal...... you folks are mistaking fear for panic and
courage for fearlessness. Stupidity does not discriminate between the brave
and the cowardly.....
CM
"Bart Senior" .@. wrote in message news

We are talking skippers now, not crew.
Courage is diffucult to define. I view courage as
doing something that might get you killed, despite the
known risks. Would an outstanding skipper do
something so risky as to possibly lose his/her life?
Skippers have no business doing anything risky,
except as a last resort.
A good skipper doesn't have fear, because he/she
always has a backup plan. When you are leading
you are making decisions about actions. Actions
conqueor fear.
Recognizing the dangers of a situation and staying
calm--is that courage? Or is it level-headedness?
"Capt. NealŪ" wrote
"Joe" wrote
|
| Having worked beside and for 100's of skippers I can tell you when the
| **** hit the fans having courage can save you and your crews life. And
| a coward can get you all killed.
|
| And I would not sail with anyone who makes declarations that he's never
| afraid. I do not like liars. And if he's never been afraid at sea, then
| he hasen't been to sea long enough to know sqwat .....and is no one I
| would trust.
|
| The most courage you can see is a man or woman doing his or her job
| despite the fear.
| Thats what makes them "Outstanding" IMO.
|
| Joe
|
But, is it not generally understood that fear causes degradation in clear
thinking? And is not clear thinking of paramount importance in any
emergency?
CN