Just finished reading the book, watching the video, listening to Ron Shirley comment on it and feeling really sad. I think people should always voice their opinions on diving accidents. It keeps them thinking. I might not agree with folks, but I'm really glad they're thinking.
This accident has been thought and talked to death. It's really hard to step back and let people have their say because there was such a tragic loss.
The book, at the end, does have great advice. The statistics for deep tech diving losses are phenomenal. The odds are so harshly against a person. The book also chronicles other losses like Exley (sp?) Now that guy was a titan. Instead of Shaw's paltry 333 dives, Exley (and others) had thousands. It proves you only have to die once. One o-ring, one snag, one bubble, on grounded device, open circuit, you die.
I feel that the dangerous diving is fun, in part, for the same reason motorcycle riding, skydiving etc. is fun. Your brain KNOWS it's at hazard. That adrenalin trickle is there. Being just a little scared, concerned, task overloaded, at hazard, it's addictive. There's a reason.
My problem with the hazard of it is that when your gas gets messed up, it affects your brain. It affects the only thing keeping you alive. No matter how much you train. Look at Shaw's video. He went into training mode. Situational awareness escaped him. Then you read about Shirley's escape, a true mastery of a completely catastrophic situation. His capabilities were the only thing that saved his life. He never ever gave up on the mental, or the physical struggle.
I know, deep in my heart, that I'm not capable of doing what they do. I can do very complex operations. Can I do them with a plastic bag on my head or someone sitting on my chest? I highly doubt it.
The commercial industry has established what it takes to do it safely and NO recreational diver adheres to those standards. If safety's not a concern, well, I guess that's the choice. Safely vs. recreationally.
I know this will incite comment. That's ok. People have a huge investment in emotion and money into their fun and will defend it. All said and done, I'll defend their right to do it. I don't agree with it, but it is their decision. I'm just talking about why I won't do it.
Amazing stories. Sad stories. That's diving.