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informed and calculated risk
I hope you will forgive my rant but it does concern sailing. I got
onto this topic because someone here thinks taking a tiny child sailing is bad. This no-risk-nanny-state-knows-best attitude I find nauseating and I hope its purveyor is not an American. Remember that our ancestors took amazing risks with their children. Many of them took them onto leaky sailing vessels to spend months crossing oceans where the known death rate was very high. Remember that many of our ancestors piled their kids onto wagons and spent months in a very hostile environment where the death rate was very high. If you want a real perspective on this, read about the Mormon Hand Cart disaster on the plains of Wyoming and Nebraska, its a real heartbreaker. In very few cases, people did NOT have to take these extreme risks with their families but I think Americans should be thankful they did because it has been passed on as part of our national character. I am not advocating risk for any macho reasons and in fact am repulsed by macho BS risky behavior. Instead, I advocate informed and calculated risk taking. Over the years, either due to major personality flaws or the almighty trying to kill me I have managed to take part in some strange outdoor activities and in every case I saw examples of macho BS and calculated risk taking and avoidance. I have stood on the dock looking at small white caps on the water with my crew looking disgusted at me thinking I was a coward wimp because I suddenly got a bad feeling about sailing that day and decided I was not able to make good decisions. Some of these people will no longer sail with me for that reason but I still think I was right. Back when I did a lot of rock climbing, I dated a girl who also climbed and we went on a trip to climb Devils Tower in WY. Just on a whim, I wimped out and she was disgusted and never went out with me again but I think I was right not to climb. On three separate occasions I have carried 500' of cave rope up a mountain in Alabama and snaked through the canyon passages and rigged the 408' drop into Surprise Pit only to decide at the last minute not to do the pit. Now I am nearly 50 and some of my friends have been killed and some seriously injured because they gave in to macho impulses when they should have allowed reason to guide their judgement. They might have thought me a wimp when I refused to do something at particular time, but they have stopped either due to death or dumb-ass injury while I have managed to eventually do the things I wanted and even more than they ever did. One friend of mine is paralysed from the waist down, he fell 250' in a cave ...and lived...sorta. The day before the trip, he asked me to go and told me who was leading the trip. I refused to go and told him it was because I did not approve of the leaders attitude toward safety. He was dissapointed and puzzled because this leader was a world famous caver (caving is a small world, you can be world famous by knowing only 1000 ppl). The next day, he allowed his judgement to be swayed by macho crap and will pay for it the rest of his life. A few years ago, Sail magazine ran an article called "Chicken Harbor" in which they criticized people who wait for weeks at West End for "perfect weather" before crossing the Gulf Stream. This was one of the most perverted disgusting macho pieces of crap I have ever read and I wonder how many people it has killed trying to live up to such nonsense. I have never read Sail Mag since. One should never allow the perceptions of others regarding your bravery to influence your judgement. In spite of this, some might see your decisions as macho but you should discourage this and explain your assessment of the risk vs reward. My kids see me perusing the orbital photos of Mars where I explain that I think I see cave features on its water torn surface. My kids, especially my 8 yr old daughter, have loved the mild cave exploring we have done together and I tell them that someday they will be exploring caves on Mars. First she looks excited, then pensive, then scared and asks "but wouldn't we have to take a rocket to get there", "of course I say, it could take months", she replies "rockets sometimes blow up." I tell her that is true but she will have to evaluate that risk vs her urge to explore. Very young children may not remember specific events but attitudes get passed on to them very quickly. If you give them irrational reasons to be fearful, they will be. If you give them ability to evaluate risk, they will do so (This does not apply to 14 yr old boys who temporarily suspend rational judgement in favor of decisions made by Testosterone). My rant for the day, now I am going to work on my MiniCups (12' hoem built sailboats). |
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Paul Schilter wrote:
dbohara, The number one rule in scuba diving (besides rushing for the surface)is you can cancel or abort the dive at any time, no questions asked. Anyone who tries to make someone feel uncomfortable with their decision to abort isn't a friend. Paul Reminds me of the time a 'good buddy' of mine loaned me equipment and took me out into a cove off the North Atlantic ocean. We went down and I couldn't breath. I came back up and he said to try again...that I was probably panicking and trying too hard. Seemed to make sense, so I tried it again..once more couldn't breath and noticed the two other guys had disappeared. I popped to the surface, inflated my vest and snorkeled to shore. He came back a while later, checked my tank and then admitted he had forgotten to fill it. I haven't tried it since. |
Don White wrote:
went down and I couldn't breath. I came back up and he said to try again...that I was probably panicking and trying too hard. When this happened to me, my partner laffed and said, "First, you have to breathe OUT!" It was the first time I had donned SCUBA gear and, of course, I filled my lungs before going under. Paul |
Paul wrote:
Anyone who tries to make someone feel uncomfortable with their decision to abort isn't a friend. Paul Ding! We have a winner folks. _Never_ relinquish your right to exercise your own _good_ judgment. |
Don:
Are you sure this is a "friend". He didnt maybe take out an insurance policy on you did he. Maybe sometime in the distant past you ****ed him off? |
Cave diving is one of the few things I will not try. It is one of the
few sports where almost ANY mistake is fatal. I am glad some people do it but I consider it to be an elaborate form of suicide. |
dbohar,
I considered taking a course but haven't gotten around to it. Your buoyancy control has to be perfect. Just couldn't see what would be that interesting in a cave. Plus you have to reconfigure to a long hose. I might give rebreathers a go at some point but for now open circuit is fine. Paul wrote: Cave diving is one of the few things I will not try. It is one of the few sports where almost ANY mistake is fatal. I am glad some people do it but I consider it to be an elaborate form of suicide. |
Don,
Yeah you always want to keep on eye on your tank's pressure gage. Also breath off the regulator and watch the gage, it shouldn't drop any or your tank valve isn't all the way open. Since my wife is my dive buddy I try not to get us into any tight situations. Paul Don White wrote: Paul Schilter wrote: dbohara, The number one rule in scuba diving (besides rushing for the surface)is you can cancel or abort the dive at any time, no questions asked. Anyone who tries to make someone feel uncomfortable with their decision to abort isn't a friend. Paul Reminds me of the time a 'good buddy' of mine loaned me equipment and took me out into a cove off the North Atlantic ocean. We went down and I couldn't breath. I came back up and he said to try again...that I was probably panicking and trying too hard. Seemed to make sense, so I tried it again..once more couldn't breath and noticed the two other guys had disappeared. I popped to the surface, inflated my vest and snorkeled to shore. He came back a while later, checked my tank and then admitted he had forgotten to fill it. I haven't tried it since. |
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